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Modern Slavery: The Most-Afflicted Countries

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    ♪ (music) ♪
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    (Bryce Plank) Slavery
    used to look like this.
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    Then it evolved into this.
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    And today, it looks like this.
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    In fact, there are an estimated
    45.8 million people
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    living in modern slavery
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    across 167 different countries.
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    They fall into three general categories:
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    children held in the commercial sex trade;
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    adults held in the commercial sex trade;
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    and any other laborer made to work
    through force, fraud, or coercion.
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    The trafficking victim often looks
    like anybody else at work
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    in a mine, on a farm, in a factory.
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    Many are lured by promises
    of a steady job in another country,
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    only to have their passports confiscated
    when they arrive.
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    However, many slaves work
    in their native countries
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    or even the cities where they were born.
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    According to the Global Slavery Index,
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    these ten countries are home
    to the most modern slaves.
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    They each suffer from income inequality,
    discrimination, and classism,
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    and entrenched corruption.
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    Number ten, Indonesia, produces
    about 35% of the world's palm oil.
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    The many small palm plantations
    present an immense challenge to inspectors
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    trying to crack down on child labor.
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    The country's many islands are also home
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    to tens of thousands of enslaved fishermen
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    trafficked from Myanmar, Laos,
    Thailand, and Cambodia.
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    Number nine is the Democratic
    Republic of Congo.
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    20,000 of the DRC's
    more than 870,000 slaves
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    live in one of the most
    hellish landscapes on the planet,
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    a vast ore mine
    in the east of the country.
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    The terrorist group Boko Haram
    gets overshadowed by ISIS,
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    although it kills more people.
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    When it comes to enslavement,
    one of its tactics
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    is to give Nigerian entrepreneurs loans
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    and then force them to join their group
    if they fail to repay fast enough.
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    Seventh is Russia.
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    55% of the slaves there
    work in construction.
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    Foreigners are lured
    mainly from nearby Azerbaijan,
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    the "stans," Ukraine, and North Korea--
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    thanks to this border
    on the far eastern edge of Russia.
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    The North Korean government
    is the world's largest single slaveholder.
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    Not only does it force
    more than 1 million of its people
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    to toil in labor camps
    and other similarly hopeless situations,
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    but it actually loans out some people
    to work in neighboring China and Russia,
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    then pockets most of their wages.
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    This exploitation generates
    about $2.3 billion each year
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    for the Kim Jong-Un regime.
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    The fifth most enslaved country,
    Uzbekistan,
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    is the world's sixth
    largest producer of cotton.
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    It has benefited from forced labor,
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    as the government puts
    more than 1 million people to work
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    using threats of debt bondage,
    heavy fines, asset confiscation,
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    and police intimidation.
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    Slave recruiters in Bangladesh
    promise poor families
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    that their boys will be given a job,
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    only to be enslaved
    on a faraway island and beaten
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    to clean fish for up to 24 hours straight.
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    Often, these fish are exported as cat food
    for our pets here in the West.
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    Sometimes, the boys meet a gruesome death
    when they are eaten by tigers
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    while searching for firewood.
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    Third is Pakistan,
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    which has suffered through decades
    of conflict, terrorism, and displacement,
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    especially along its northwestern border
    with Afghanistan.
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    Its provinces have not raised
    the minimum age of marriage,
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    which has allowed the widespread problem
    of forced and child weddings to continue.
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    Over 250 million Chinese
    have migrated within the country
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    to find better opportunities,
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    creating the ideal conditions
    for human trafficking.
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    Each year, 58 million children
    are "left behind"
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    as their parents search for work
    in one of China's many booming cities.
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    Every year, up to 70,000 children
    fall into forced begging,
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    illegal adoption, and sex slavery.
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    And number one is India, which has by far
    the most victims of modern slavery.
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    While economic growth has greatly reduced
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    the percentage of its citizens
    living in poverty,
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    the country's sheer size still results
    in more than 270 million Indians
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    living on less than $2/day.
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    It's unsurprising then
    that intergenerational bonded labor,
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    forced child labor,
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    commercial sexual exploitation,
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    forced begging,
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    forced recruitment
    into nonstate armed groups,
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    and forced marriage
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    all exist in India.
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    The good news is that
    the government's already created
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    many of the laws necessary
    to fight the epidemic,
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    but the challenge is effectively
    enforcing those laws
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    and tracking improvements
    and areas of continued need.
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    On the flip side, these are the countries
    rated as the ten best
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    at fighting modern slavery.
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    As you can see, no country
    has completely eradicated the problem,
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    and leaders on this issue--
    like the United States--
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    can even contribute to it
    by consuming products
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    that were, at some point
    in their supply chain,
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    touched by slave labor.
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    While it can be hopeless to be a slave,
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    the rest of us can help
    by raising awareness,
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    helping an anti-slavery group
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    or pressuring government officials
    around the world to take action.
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    Kevin Bales, a professor
    of contemporary slavery
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    and the lead author of the study
    on which this video is based,
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    described to NPR's Fresh Air
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    one of the many instances
    where he's seen slaves being freed.
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    (Dave Davies) "Can you share
    an example of where that's worked,
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    where locals with the support
    of the organization
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    have liberated slaves?"
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    (Dr. Kevin Bales) Sure.
    I've got lots of those.
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    But I think the one that I most find
    really rather thrilling, myself,
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    is how in Northern India,
    more than ten years ago,
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    we began to work
    with a local organization.
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    Those young men who had come to freedom
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    began to operate with our support
    to go into other villages
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    where the entire village was enslaved
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    in hereditary slavery
    and working in quarries.
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    Because they were the same ethnicity,
    they would slip in in the evenings
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    and meet with people having their supper,
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    and they would say, "Oh, so who do
    you work for around here?
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    You all work for the same person!
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    Oh, you're all working in the mines!
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    But where's the school?"
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    "Oh, there is no school."
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    And they'd start this Socratic dialogue
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    that would lead in time to an awakening
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    of an understanding of an alternative.
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    It's important to remember
    when you're in hereditary slavery,
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    you have no notion of freedom.
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    But when the image and truth of freedom
    is awakened in your mind,
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    people really do become unstoppable.
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    There would come a time
    when those young men would say,
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    "I used to be in the same situation.
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    I used to live in a village
    just like this one,
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    but now we have a school
    and we even have a clinic,
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    and we have jobs" and so forth.
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    Then people would say,
    "How do you get there?"
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    And then, what we found there
    is that in those villages,
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    the women would step forward.
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    Even though it's a very
    male-dominated society,
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    the women would step forward and say,
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    "We will lead this
    even if it leads to our deaths."
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    Because, they would say--
    not to me, but to my women colleagues--
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    "We don't want our daughters to be raped
    the way we were raped
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    by the slaveholders, by the slavemasters."
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    And they would push that along.
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    (Bryce) You can learn more
    about this study through the link below.
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    You can help spread this video
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    by hitting the like button
    and sharing it with your friends.
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    Thanks for watching.
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    Until next time, for TDC, I'm Bryce Plank.
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    ♪ (music) ♪
Title:
Modern Slavery: The Most-Afflicted Countries
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Amplifying Voices
Project:
Human Trafficking
Duration:
07:05

English subtitles

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