Cardinal Nichols: step up efforts
to combat human trafficking
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| Caedinal Vincent Nichols who is attending the Santa Marta conference in the Vatican on February 8th and 9th. |
The international 'Santa Marta' conference, meeting in the
Vatican on February 8th and 9th, brings together Catholic leaderss and law
enforcement officials to coordinate efforts on combatting modern slavery
By Philippa Hitchen
Churches, governments, police and business leaders must do
more to tackle the growing phenomenon of human trafficking. That’s the view
of English Cardinal Vincent Nichols of Westminster, who is in the
Vatican this week for a meeting of the ‘Santa Marta’ group on combatting modern
slavery and trafficking.
Church leaders and heads of police departments from over 30
countries are attending the meeting, which will conclude with a papal audience
on Friday. The two-day encounter opened on Thursday, February 8th,
the feast day of St Josephine Bakhita, a Sudanese slave girl who was named the
patron saint of the Church’s anti-slavery movement.
Cardinal Nichols, who heads the Bishops Conference of England
and Wales, recently convened a panel of experts as part of an investigation
into the problem of trafficking in the UK. The report found that while Britain
is a world leader in anti-trafficking legislation, there is still much work to
be done in supporting survivors and prosecuting the traffickers.
Cardinal Nichols talked to us about his concerns and about
the achievements of the international Santa Marta group over the past five
years.
He says there is an increased awareness of this phenomenon,
so the meetings have moved from defining the problem and building to trust, to
discussing more effective action and partnerships.
Reflecting on attitudes of people who believe that
trafficking is not a problem that concerns them, the cardinal says we have an
overload of information, but it’s essential to focus on the faces of the
victims and survivors of trafficking. “If you get your car washed for £5 and
there are 3 or 4 guys doing it, you can be pretty sure they’re working under
conditions of modern day slavery”, he says.
Focus on faces of victims
He cites a middle-aged Afghan woman he met in London who had
spent the last 30 years in domestic slavery and was forced to sleep under the
kitchen table. “That was the only privacy she had, and that’s today, that’s in
London and that’s in our midst”, he says, adding that “when you put a face to
what’s happening, then its impact begins to touch your heart”.
Track down the traffickers
Commenting on efforts to eradicate trafficking in the UK,
Cardinal Nichols says “there is some disappointment that the police action is
not as consistent and not as thorough as it could be”. The recent investigation
he took part in calls on local police authorities to step up practical efforts,
not criminalizing the victims, but using their information “to track down the
real criminals”.
Take profit out of trafficking
Trafficking, the cardinal continues, is a “hugely profitable
crime and to break it we have to take the profit out of it” at both local level
and through financial institutions and businesses. Profit is a good motive,
says, but it must be “ethical profit and not at cost of human dignity”. Younger
people, he adds, are beginning to boycott shops whose products are the result
of slave labour.
Leadership of Pope Francis
Cardinal Nichols says he will be thanking the pope for his
leadership and asking him to keep up efforts “to remind governments of their
duties, business leaders of their duties, and encouraging local communities to
become more aware of this deep wound in the body of humanity”.

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