News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Children Forced to Be Cannabis Slaves |
Title: | UK: Children Forced to Be Cannabis Slaves |
Published On: | 2007-09-24 |
Source: | New Zealand Herald (New Zealand) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-11 22:02:36 |
CHILDREN FORCED TO BE CANNABIS SLAVES
Hundreds of young children illegally trafficked into the UK are the
new victims of Britain's booming cannabis trade.
Figures obtained by the Independent on Sunday reveal that, as
organised criminals push cannabis production to record levels, at
least one child a week is being found by police raiding cannabis factories.
Experts warn that children as young as 13 are being smuggled from
Southeast Asia to work as "slaves" for gangs in dangerous conditions,
being kept captive in towns and suburbs across Britain.
They believe there has been a five-fold increase in the trade in the
past 12 months.
Police believe organised crime gangs, largely Vietnamese, have moved
quickly to dominate Britain's cannabis market after declassification
in 2004 increased the potential rewards of growing and selling the
drug and decreased the risks of punishment.
Gangs can reap up to UKP 300,000 ($817,570) profit a year from a
three-bedroom house converted into a cannabis factory.
Children are brought in by gangs to tend the plants. Many have been
found unable to escape through doors or windows sealed and wired to
give off dangerous electric shocks. Others fear reprisals against
relatives if they try to escape.
Police are raiding up to three houses a day where children are being
discovered.
"There is clear evidence that there are young people who are
trafficked, bought and sold, for the purpose of forced labour in
cannabis production in the UK," said Christine Beddoe, director of the
campaign group End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and the
Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes (Ecpat).
"In the past 12 months there has been a 500 per cent increase in the
number of cases being reported to us. We now get told about one young
person every week being removed from a cannabis factory. But nobody
knows the true scale of the problem."
Simon Byrne, Assistant Chief Constable of Merseyside Police and
cannabis spokesman for the Association of Chief Police Officers
(Acpo), said colleagues call cannabis "the cash machine of organised
crime".
Once in Britain, children are forced to work as "gardeners", watering
and tending the plants, and have to sleep in lofts or cupboards.
Neighbours are often unaware of their existence. Even after they are
discovered by police, their ordeal isn't over.
Beddoe said many Vietnamese children go missing from care within 48
hours of being removed from cannabis houses and no one knows what
happens to them.
"Local authorities are struggling to keep these kids safe, and it
doesn't help that agencies are not sharing information."
Tuan Nguyen, a young Vietnamese boy, was discovered in Manchester in
June. After being placed in an authority care home, he is now missing
and it is feared he has been snatched back by the gang that brought
him to the UK.
Paul Woltman from children's services, defended the authority's
conduct of the boy's care.
"We wanted to look after him in an environment which was reasonably
normal as well as secure, but at the same time recognised his right to
some freedom."
Experts are also critical of the justice system's treatment of these
children. Some are seen as victims and taken into care, but many more
face prosecution and jail.
Hundreds of young children illegally trafficked into the UK are the
new victims of Britain's booming cannabis trade.
Figures obtained by the Independent on Sunday reveal that, as
organised criminals push cannabis production to record levels, at
least one child a week is being found by police raiding cannabis factories.
Experts warn that children as young as 13 are being smuggled from
Southeast Asia to work as "slaves" for gangs in dangerous conditions,
being kept captive in towns and suburbs across Britain.
They believe there has been a five-fold increase in the trade in the
past 12 months.
Police believe organised crime gangs, largely Vietnamese, have moved
quickly to dominate Britain's cannabis market after declassification
in 2004 increased the potential rewards of growing and selling the
drug and decreased the risks of punishment.
Gangs can reap up to UKP 300,000 ($817,570) profit a year from a
three-bedroom house converted into a cannabis factory.
Children are brought in by gangs to tend the plants. Many have been
found unable to escape through doors or windows sealed and wired to
give off dangerous electric shocks. Others fear reprisals against
relatives if they try to escape.
Police are raiding up to three houses a day where children are being
discovered.
"There is clear evidence that there are young people who are
trafficked, bought and sold, for the purpose of forced labour in
cannabis production in the UK," said Christine Beddoe, director of the
campaign group End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and the
Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes (Ecpat).
"In the past 12 months there has been a 500 per cent increase in the
number of cases being reported to us. We now get told about one young
person every week being removed from a cannabis factory. But nobody
knows the true scale of the problem."
Simon Byrne, Assistant Chief Constable of Merseyside Police and
cannabis spokesman for the Association of Chief Police Officers
(Acpo), said colleagues call cannabis "the cash machine of organised
crime".
Once in Britain, children are forced to work as "gardeners", watering
and tending the plants, and have to sleep in lofts or cupboards.
Neighbours are often unaware of their existence. Even after they are
discovered by police, their ordeal isn't over.
Beddoe said many Vietnamese children go missing from care within 48
hours of being removed from cannabis houses and no one knows what
happens to them.
"Local authorities are struggling to keep these kids safe, and it
doesn't help that agencies are not sharing information."
Tuan Nguyen, a young Vietnamese boy, was discovered in Manchester in
June. After being placed in an authority care home, he is now missing
and it is feared he has been snatched back by the gang that brought
him to the UK.
Paul Woltman from children's services, defended the authority's
conduct of the boy's care.
"We wanted to look after him in an environment which was reasonably
normal as well as secure, but at the same time recognised his right to
some freedom."
Experts are also critical of the justice system's treatment of these
children. Some are seen as victims and taken into care, but many more
face prosecution and jail.
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