UK anti-slavery laws have a 'gaping hole'

William Wilberforce campaigned to end slavery in the 19th Century
William Wilberforce campaigned to end slavery in the 19th Century

Reddit

Stumble

 

Opinion Formers

Unlock Democracy

Unlock Democracy is the joint campaign of Charter 88 and the New Politics Network promoting democratic renewal and active engagement in the political process.

x

Find more Opinion Formers in this category:

 

Related News

Video: Cameron prepares for speech

Conservative leader David Cameron prepares, with the aid of close advisers including William Hague and his wife Samantha, to give his leader's speech to the party conference in Manchester.

Cameron delivered his last speech to conference before the general election today
 

Related Analysis and Comment

PMQs sketch: The numbers game

Harriet Harman shows what can be done with Brown's dividing lines - once you get rid of Brown.

Harriet Harman

Thursday, 09, Jul 2009 12:07

By Liz Stephens

Parliament will debate an amendment to the coroners and justice bill today after a statement by the former director of public prosecutions said existing UK laws leave police unable to pursue cases of slavery in Britain.

Ken MacDonald QC believes the UK may currently be in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights over the matter.

The UK abolished the slave trade many years ago but campaigners argue there is currently no stand alone statutory offence for slavery under UK law.

Campaign groups, Liberty and Anti-Slavery International, are also pushing for a change in the law.

Shami Chakrabarti, director of Liberty, commented: "In an age when new criminal offences have flown out of Westminster like confetti, the lack of an effective anti-slavery law is a gaping hole in the protection of the vulnerable."

"We urge parliamentarians of all stripes to join together in supporting this amendment and honouring the tradition of William Wilberforce," she said.

Under the amendments proposed, servitude and forced labour would become offences in the UK for the first time.

What do you think?

Name 

Location 

Email 

Comment 

Enter the text shown to the right

More News

Work till you drop?

Employers will not be able to force 65-year-olds to retire from October 2011, the government has announced, giving older people the opportunity to continue working as long as they like.

Default retirement age will be dropped from October 2011

Coalition rewrites post-election history

David Cameron has denied misleading Conservative MPs during coalition talks with the Liberal Democrats, insisting he did not tell them Labour was offering Nick Clegg's party electoral reform without a referendum.

Tory leaders leave the Cabinet Office during coalition negotiations

Indian 'jobs mission' continues

David Cameron is meeting with Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh for talks today as the British trade delegation's trip enters its final day.

David Cameron meets with Manmohan Singh today

Ex-Blair aide cleared of wrongdoing

A former aide to Tony Blair has been cleared of wrongdoing after allegations that she would take cash to exercise parliamentary influence.

Politicians were investigated for promoting issues in exchange for cash

Free Newsletter

Sign up to politics.co.uk's free daily newsletter and never miss a key political news story again.


Opinion Formers

We are the UK's leading dedicated political news website. Find out how you can get your message across to our audience of opinion leaders and policy makers.

Election Manifesto Videos

British Security Industry Association New Government Manifesto

Click on the video below to begin playing, or view the full size video here. Get Adobe Flash player

politics.co.uk's Opinion Formers set out to present their manifesto "wish lists" to the next generation of MPs and ministers ahead of the General Election in 2010.

Check out more Opinion Former election manifesto videos here.