Global Slavery Index 2013 Rankings: Mauritania, Haiti, Pakistan Top List

Modern slavery includes slavery, slavery-like practices (such as debt bondage, forced marriage, and sale or exploitation of children), human trafficking, and forced labor. Australia-based Walk Free Foundation released the Global Slavery Index 2013 rankings, a look at global slavery around the world. Which country tops the list of most slaves?

Top 10 Countries with highest prevalence of modern slavery
Rank – Country Name
1 – Mauritania
2 – Haiti
3 – Pakistan
4 – India
5 – Nepal
6 – Moldova
7 – Benin
8 – Côte d’Ivoire
9 – The Gambia
10 – Gabon

Top 10 Countries with lowest prevalence of modern slavery
Rank – Country Name
150 – Denmark
150 – Finland
150 – Luxembourg
150 – Norway
150 – Sweden
150 – Switzerland
159 – New Zealand
160 – United Kingdom
160 – Ireland
160 – Iceland

Ten countries with highest estimated number of population in modern slavery
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Here is the complete list of the 162 countries included in the study. Global Slavery Index was based on a combination of three factors: estimated prevalence of modern slavery by population, levels of child marriage, and levels of human trafficking into and out of the country. This gives the “weighted measure.”

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What is modern slavery?
In 2013, modern slavery takes many forms, and is known by many names. Whether it is called human
trafficking, forced labour, slavery or slavery-like practices (a category that includes debt bondage, forced or servile marriage, sale or exploitation of children including in armed conflict) victims of modern slavery have their freedom denied, and are used and controlled and exploited by another person for profit, sex, or the thrill of domination. Today some people are still being born into hereditary slavery, a staggering but harsh reality, particularly in parts of West Africa and South Asia.

Other victims are captured or kidnapped before being sold or kept for exploitation, whether through ‘marriage’, unpaid labour on fishing boats, or as domestic workers. Others are tricked and lured into situations they cannot escape, with false promises of a good job or an education.

Modern slavery can involve using children in the military, whether as combatants, porters, cooks or for other jobs. The chains of modern slavery are not always physical – sometimes escalating debts, intimidation, deception, isolation, fear or even a ‘marriage’ that is forced on a young woman or girl without her consent can be used to hold a person against their will without the need for locks or chains.

Modern slavery is poorly understood, so it remains hidden within houses, communities and worksites. Criminals are creative and will use any available means to conceal, rationalise, and justify slavery – be it race, ethnicity, religion, gender, caste, ‘custom’ or any other excuse or vulnerability they can exploit. Modern slavery is not always as self-evident as some other crimes, such as homicide or even theft. Modern slavery involves an extreme abuse of power, which is not always immediately apparent but requires understanding the people and the relationships involved.

While most forms of modern slavery are illegal all over the world, existing information suggests these laws are rarely used and enforced. The 2013 US Trafficking in Persons Report notes that while 46,570 victims of human trafficking were officially identified in 2012, there were only 7,705 prosecutions, and 4,750 convictions recorded globally.

The reality of modern slavery is millions of people who cannot walk away, who are trapped and denied freedom and lives of dignity, and bound only to serve and profit the criminals that control them.

SOURCE Walk Free Foundation

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