WEBVTT 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:01.470 ♪ (music) ♪ 00:00:01.470 --> 00:00:03.259 Slavery used to look like this, 00:00:03.259 --> 00:00:04.774 then it evolved into this, 00:00:04.774 --> 00:00:07.057 and today it looks like this. 00:00:07.620 --> 00:00:10.810 In fact, there are an estimated 45.8 million people 00:00:10.810 --> 00:00:14.000 living in modern slavery 00:00:14.000 --> 00:00:15.350 across 167 different countries. 00:00:15.350 --> 00:00:17.825 They fall into three general categories: 00:00:17.825 --> 00:00:20.300 children held in the commercial sex trade; 00:00:20.300 --> 00:00:22.659 adults held in the commercial sex trade; 00:00:22.659 --> 00:00:25.019 and any other laborer made to work 00:00:25.019 --> 00:00:26.570 through force, fraud, or coercion. 00:00:26.570 --> 00:00:29.775 The trafficking victim often looks like anybody else at work 00:00:29.775 --> 00:00:32.980 in a mine, on a farm, in a factory. 00:00:32.980 --> 00:00:37.500 Many are lured by promises of a steady job in another country, 00:00:37.500 --> 00:00:39.110 only to have their passports confiscated when they arrive. 00:00:39.110 --> 00:00:43.640 However, many slaves work in their native countries 00:00:43.640 --> 00:00:44.870 or even the cities where they were born. 00:00:44.870 --> 00:00:49.370 According to the The Global Slavery Index, 00:00:49.370 --> 00:00:50.370 these ten countries are home to the most modern slaves. 00:00:50.370 --> 00:00:53.115 They each suffer from income inequality, discrimination, and classism, 00:00:53.115 --> 00:00:55.860 and entrenched corruption. 00:00:55.860 --> 00:01:00.570 Number ten, Indonesia, produces about 35% of the world’s palm oil. 00:01:00.570 --> 00:01:04.989 The many small palm plantations present an immense challenge to inspectors 00:01:04.989 --> 00:01:07.030 trying to crackdown on child labor. 00:01:07.030 --> 00:01:08.910 The country’s many islands are also home 00:01:08.910 --> 00:01:10.790 to tens of thousands of enslaved fisherman 00:01:10.790 --> 00:01:15.080 trafficked from Myanmar, Laos, Thailand and Cambodia. 00:01:15.080 --> 00:01:18.135 Number nine is the Democratic Republic of Congo. 00:01:18.135 --> 00:01:21.190 20,000 of the DRC’s more than 870,000 slaves 00:01:21.190 --> 00:01:26.400 live in one of the most hellish landscapes on the planet, 00:01:26.400 --> 00:01:28.060 a vast ore mine in the east of the country. 00:01:28.060 --> 00:01:30.375 The terrorist group Boko Haram gets overshadowed by ISIS, 00:01:30.375 --> 00:01:32.690 although it kills more people. 00:01:32.690 --> 00:01:35.320 When it comes to enslavement, 00:01:35.320 --> 00:01:37.950 one of its tactics is to give Nigerian entrepreneurs loans 00:01:37.950 --> 00:01:42.880 and then force them to join their group if they fail to repay fast enough. 00:01:42.880 --> 00:01:43.880 Seventh is Russia. 00:01:43.880 --> 00:01:47.360 55% of the slaves there work in construction. 00:01:47.360 --> 00:01:50.405 Foreigners are lured mainly from nearby Azerbaijan, the “stans,” 00:01:50.405 --> 00:01:53.450 Ukraine, and North Korea-- 00:01:53.450 --> 00:01:56.980 thanks to this border on the far eastern edge of Russia. 00:01:56.980 --> 00:02:01.220 The North Korean government is the world’s largest single slaveholder. 00:02:01.220 --> 00:02:05.740 Not only does it force more than one million of its people to toil in labor camps 00:02:05.740 --> 00:02:08.350 and other similarly hopeless situations, 00:02:08.350 --> 00:02:10.960 but it actually loans out some people to work in neighboring China and Russia, 00:02:12.870 --> 00:02:14.780 then pockets most of their wages. 00:02:14.780 --> 00:02:17.770 This exploitation generates about $2.3B each year 00:02:17.770 --> 00:02:20.760 for the Kim Jong-un regime. 00:02:20.760 --> 00:02:25.420 The fifth most enslaved country, Uzbekistan, 00:02:25.420 --> 00:02:26.420 is the world’s sixth largest producer of cotton. 00:02:26.420 --> 00:02:28.310 It has benefited from forced labor, 00:02:28.310 --> 00:02:30.200 as the government puts more than 1 million people to work 00:02:30.200 --> 00:02:34.120 using threats of debt bondage, heavy fines, 00:02:34.120 --> 00:02:38.040 asset confiscation, and police intimidation. 00:02:38.040 --> 00:02:40.374 Slave recruiters in Bangladesh promise poor families 00:02:40.374 --> 00:02:42.709 that their boys will be given a job, 00:02:42.709 --> 00:02:45.749 only to be enslaved on a faraway island and beaten 00:02:45.749 --> 00:02:48.790 to clean fish for up to 24 hours straight. 00:02:48.790 --> 00:02:53.150 Often, these fish are exported as cat food for our pets. 00:02:53.150 --> 00:02:58.350 Sometimes, the boys meet a gruesome death when they are eaten by tigers 00:02:58.350 --> 00:03:00.370 while searching for firewood. 00:03:00.370 --> 00:03:03.460 Third is Pakistan, 00:03:03.460 --> 00:03:06.550 which has suffered through decades of conflict, terrorism, and displacement-- 00:03:06.550 --> 00:03:08.490 especially along its northwestern border with Afghanistan. 00:03:08.490 --> 00:03:13.370 Its provinces have not raised the minimum age of marriage, 00:03:13.370 --> 00:03:17.560 which has allowed the widespread problem of forced and child weddings to continue. 00:03:17.560 --> 00:03:20.530 Over 250 million Chinese have migrated within the country 00:03:20.530 --> 00:03:23.500 to find better opportunities, 00:03:23.500 --> 00:03:26.530 creating the ideal conditions for human trafficking. 00:03:26.530 --> 00:03:30.570 Each year, 58 million children are "left behind" 00:03:30.570 --> 00:03:33.600 as their parents search of work in the China’s many booming cities. 00:03:33.600 --> 00:03:39.670 Every year, up to 70,000 children fall into forced begging, 00:03:39.670 --> 00:03:40.990 illegal adoption, and sex slavery. 00:03:40.990 --> 00:03:45.830 And number one is India, which has by far the most victims of modern slavery. 00:03:45.830 --> 00:03:49.629 While economic growth has greatly reduced the percentage of its citizens living in poverty, 00:03:49.629 --> 00:03:55.959 the country’s sheer size still results in more than 270 million Indians 00:03:55.959 --> 00:03:57.300 living on less than $2/day. 00:03:57.300 --> 00:04:02.820 It’s unsurprising that intergenerational bonded labor, forced child labor, 00:04:02.820 --> 00:04:05.555 commercial sexual exploitation, forced begging, 00:04:05.555 --> 00:04:08.290 forced recruitment into nonstate armed groups, and forced marriage 00:04:10.120 --> 00:04:11.950 all exist in India. 00:04:11.950 --> 00:04:16.310 The government has already created many of the laws necessary to fight the epidemic, 00:04:16.310 --> 00:04:21.820 but the challenge is enforcing those laws 00:04:21.820 --> 00:04:23.070 and tracking improvements and areas of continued need. 00:04:23.070 --> 00:04:27.800 On the flip side, these are the countries rated as the ten best at fighting modern slavery. 00:04:27.800 --> 00:04:32.180 As you can see, no country has completely eradicated the problem 00:04:32.180 --> 00:04:34.875 and leaders on this issue — like the United States — 00:04:34.875 --> 00:04:37.570 can even contribute to it by consuming products 00:04:37.570 --> 00:04:42.610 that were, at some point in their supply chain, touched by slave labor. 00:04:42.610 --> 00:04:44.930 While it can be hopeless to be a slave, 00:04:44.930 --> 00:04:47.250 the rest of us can help by raising awareness, 00:04:47.250 --> 00:04:49.350 helping an anti-slavery group, 00:04:49.350 --> 00:04:51.450 or pressuring government officials around the world to take action. 00:04:52.450 --> 00:04:54.525 Kevin Bales, a professor of contemporary slavery 00:04:54.525 --> 00:04:56.600 and the lead author of the study on which this video is based, 00:04:56.600 --> 00:05:01.210 described to NPR’s Fresh Air one of the many instances 00:05:01.210 --> 00:05:03.340 where he’s seen slaves being freed. 00:05:03.340 --> 00:05:08.380 [Fresh Air’s Dave Davies] “Can you share an example of where that’s worked, 00:05:08.380 --> 00:05:10.990 where locals with the support of the organization have liberated slaves?” 00:05:10.990 --> 00:05:13.940 [Dr. Kevin Bales] “Oh sure, I’ve got lots of those in fact. 00:05:13.940 --> 00:05:17.595 But I think the one that I most find rather thrilling, myself, 00:05:17.595 --> 00:05:21.250 is how in Northern India, more than ten years ago, 00:05:21.250 --> 00:05:25.320 we began to work with a local organization. 00:05:25.320 --> 00:05:27.880 Those young men who had come to freedom 00:05:27.880 --> 00:05:30.440 began to operate with our support to go into other villages 00:05:30.440 --> 00:05:35.630 where the entire village was enslaved in hereditary slavery, working in quarries. 00:05:35.630 --> 00:05:39.470 Because they were the same ethnicity, they would slip in in the evenings 00:05:39.470 --> 00:05:44.000 and they would meet with people while they were having their supper 00:05:44.000 --> 00:05:45.010 and they would say, ‘oh, so who do you work for around here? 00:05:45.010 --> 00:05:46.550 Oh, you all work for the same person? 00:05:46.550 --> 00:05:48.630 Oh, you’re all working in the mines? 00:05:48.630 --> 00:05:50.180 But where’s the school? 00:05:50.180 --> 00:05:51.700 Oh, there is no school.’ 00:05:51.700 --> 00:05:59.110 And they’d start this Socratic dialogue that would lead in time 00:05:59.110 --> 00:06:01.190 to an awakening of an understanding of an alternative. 00:06:01.190 --> 00:06:05.539 It’s important to remember that when you’re in hereditary slavery, 00:06:05.539 --> 00:06:06.539 you have no notion of freedom. 00:06:06.539 --> 00:06:13.310 But when the image and truth of freedom is awakened in your mind, 00:06:13.310 --> 00:06:14.310 people really do become unstoppable. 00:06:14.310 --> 00:06:16.730 There would come a time when those young men would say, 00:06:16.730 --> 00:06:19.150 ‘you know, I used to be in the same situation. 00:06:19.150 --> 00:06:23.000 I used to live in a village just like this one, 00:06:23.000 --> 00:06:24.850 but now we have a school and we even have a clinic. 00:06:24.850 --> 00:06:26.520 We have jobs and so forth.’ 00:06:26.520 --> 00:06:28.860 And then people would say, ‘how do you get there?’ 00:06:28.860 --> 00:06:31.320 And then, what we found there is that in those villages, 00:06:31.320 --> 00:06:33.780 the women would step forward even though it’s a very male dominated society. 00:06:33.780 --> 00:06:38.350 The women would step forward and say 00:06:38.350 --> 00:06:41.880 we will lead this even if it leads to our deaths. 00:06:41.880 --> 00:06:46.770 Because, they would say - not to me, but to my women colleagues - 00:06:46.770 --> 00:06:49.014 ‘we don’t want our daughters to be raped the way we were raped 00:06:49.014 --> 00:06:51.259 by the slaveholders, by the slavemasters. 00:06:51.259 --> 00:06:52.930 And they would push that along.” 00:06:52.930 --> 00:06:54.655 You can learn more about this study through the link below 00:06:54.655 --> 00:06:56.380 and you can help spread this video 00:06:56.380 --> 00:06:59.440 by hitting the like button and sharing it with your friends. 00:06:59.440 --> 00:07:00.620 Thanks for watching. 00:07:00.620 --> 00:07:03.530 Until next time, for TDC, I’m Bryce Plank.