Thursday 21 December 2023

THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE - modern slavery

 

THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE

The truth about modern slavery, by Emily Kenway, published by Pluto Press (£14.99)

Unite Landworker magazine Winter 2023/24 

Slavery is a term associated with shackles, boats and cruelty. All right-thinking people are against it and so consequently when they hear the name of William Wilberforce and the term modern-slavery, which includes forced labour, human trafficking and slavery they will sit up, pay attention and help to eradicate it?

The problem is that the modern day slavery framework has been constructed by some of the very reactionary people, companies, media outlets and governments who have attacked the very forces – the trade unions – who can do the most to end today’s slavery.

In 2016 Prime Minster Theresa May, who a year earlier introduced the Modern Slavery Act (MSA), was lauded by the media for launching her ‘anti-slavery crusade’ when she said, “this government is determined to build a Great Britain that works for everyone and will not tolerate modern slavery, an evil trade that shatters victims’ lives and traps them in a cycle of abuse.”

Warm words, that Kenway notes in the real world translated into only 12 percent of those officially recognised as modern slavery victims being given a right to remain in the UK in 2016. May, of course, did not use the MSA to legally require companies to perform extensive investigations into their supply chains and to subsequently address any human rights impacts they identified.

Meanwhile, Labour inspectorates such as the Employment Agencies Standards Inspectorate, HSE, HMRC’ wage unit and the Gangmasters and Labour Abuse Authority are all woefully underfunded and understaffed. In 2021, the anti-slavery charity Hope of Justice revealed that a year after the news first broke, workers in some Leicester textile factories were still being paid as little as £3.50 an hour.

And as Landworker highlighted last summer it also took the Tories over three years to report into the initial Seasonal Workers Scheme. (SWS) This is designed to make up for the shortage following Brexit of agricultural labour. Unsurprisingly, the report revealed gross exploitation of migrant workers, particularly those from Ukraine, who in the meantime were clearly still being terribly exploited as highlighted in an article on 19 April 2022 by The Guardian titled: ‘Ukrainian workers workers flee ‘modern slavery’ conditions on UK farms.’

The SWS, which has been massively expanded to allow up to 40,000 workers, including poultry workers and haulage drivers, to work in the UK for up to six months is, as highlighted by the Focus of Labour Exploitation (FLEX) and Fife Migrants Forum (FMF), a bonded labour scheme – forcing workers to remain with one employer – the likes of which was employed in Britain’s plantation colonies after the abolition of slavery.

Kenway contends that tougher immigration controls, embodied in Theresa May’s ‘hostile environment’, prevent migrant workers from seeking help when they experience exploitation, the result of which is a lowering of wages and conditions for all workers.

FLEX/FMF proposals to tackle these problems, including financial support to migrant community organisations and trade unions, who can then offer tailored support, have largely been ignored by the Scottish and UK Governments.

Kenway, does not, of course, condemn the many honest people seeking to end modern slavery. Her readers are asked to imagine doing things differently with each chapter providing possible alternatives to conventional thought on how to tackle modern slavery, which is a product and not some sort of extreme aberration of the political economy we live under in which so few people own so much wealth. Ultimately, modern slavery will exist and even grow until we find a way to organise workers everywhere to get what we rightly deserve.




Colombia: 'COMMITTED TO DOING EVERYTHING WE CAN'

 Unite observer pleased at Colombian result for trade 

Unite Landworker Winter 2023/4 

When Michelle Smith from the UNITE executive committee visited Colombia last year as part of a Justice for Colombia (J4C) delegation to observe the presidential election and monitor the state of trade union and human rights she witnessed “great enthusiasm… amongst voters… especially young people, women, ethnic minorities, the peace movement and trade unions.”

Michelle was delighted that Gustavo Petro was elected with his vice-president Francia Marquez -a long standing peace and environmental activist - becoming the first African-Colombian woman to hold the post in the new coalition government, the Historic Pact. “Social investment was promised with pledges to make decent education and healthcare more accessible to lower-income Colombians. By developing basic services, including improving sanitary conditions and bringing clean water to underdeveloped regions, poverty can be tackled”

Michelle met victims of state violence which includes thousands of trade unionists over the last half century with Colombia even today the deadliest country for organised labour.

Petro came to power promising to honour the 2016 Peace Agreement in which paramilitary and guerilla groups – of which FARC was the largest – laid down their weapons after a decades long war that left 450,000 civilians dead.

J4C, which was established to promote solidarity with Colombian civil society by the trade union movement here in 2002, played a vital role in facilitating the talks between the Colombian government and guerillas, of which Petro was one in his early adult years, that led to peace.

However, when Ivan Duque became President in 2018, he allowed inequality to rise and abandoned the peace pathway leading to over 1,300 social leaders and peace accord signatories being assassinated. 40 Fensuagro agricultural workers’ union members were murdered.

Petro’s government has promised Total Peace as a means of markedly distinguishing itself from previous fragmented and piecemeal negotiations with individual armed groups. It intends implementing peace accords as well as pursuing national unity by reducing inequality levels.

In March 2023 the government made history by recognising the trade union movement as a collective victim of the lengthy conflict. On 13 September a commemoration event that included Labour Minister Glorio Ramirez, a former trade unionist who visited Britain and Ireland with JFC in 2006, acknowledged the violence enacted against organised labour. Also present were relatives of murdered trade unionists as well as representatives of Colombia’s three trade union centres – CUT, CGT and CTC.

Petro told the crowd “With the strength of the people, I can say that the trade union movement was a victim of violence in thousands of murders due to greed and barbarism.”

Unsurprisingly, Michelle is heartened by developments.

“Trade unions in Britain and Ireland have long campaigned for an end to violence against Colombian trade unionists. We are very pleased that the current Colombia President recognises this historic injustice and is not only working alongside unions to develop government policy but has appointed former trade union leaders into key governmental positions.

“The challenge for Petro and the Colombian trade union movement will be seeing the ambitious social reforms and peace policy implemented inside the four-year term.

“Ongoing international support will be essential in maximising the possibility of making this a reality and Unite and other British and Irish unions Ireland are committed to doing everything we can.”