22
Apr
2024
Watch
Amending Directive 2011/36/EU on preventing and combating trafficking in human beings and protecting its victims (debate)
Madam President, in 2024, human trafficking continues to affect thousands of people around the world. In 2021 alone, the European Union registered more than 7 000 victims. Between 2008 and 2022, Portugal recorded a 107 % increase in this type of crime. Unfortunately, in Alentejo, those who work the land are, for the most part, migrant citizens from countries such as Nepal, Bangladesh, Bulgaria, Romania, Moldova, Ukraine, India, Senegal, Pakistan, East Timor – and I could say others – drawn to Europe under false promises from criminal networks. On arrival, instead of decent work, they are manipulated by employers who seize their passports, keep them in remote locations, with unhealthy conditions and with more debt than salary. Of the 24.9 million people the ILO speaks of who are trapped in forced labour, 16 million are exploited in the private sector, such as domestic work, construction or agriculture. There is a political responsibility of the EU against trafficking, for better solidarity, investment in the capacity to welcome and integrate safe pathways for immigrants and refugees, rather than insisting on security measures that always leave them in the hands of these unscrupulous people without decent work.