Police in the United Kingdom shared a photo of a woman cleaning a window, but they say there is something wrong with it.
In the photo, the woman can be seen wiping the glass.
“This could be an indicator of domestic servitude. Many victims won’t know they’re being exploited and need you to be a voice for them.”
Migrant Numbers Down
In November, it was reported that the number of European migrant workers in the UK. has shown its sharpest fall since records began in 1997.“The sharp fall in EU migrant workers over the last year shows that Britain’s labour market is already changing ahead of its exit from the EU, and long before its post-Brexit migration plan is in place,” said Stephen Clarke, who is a senior economic analyst at think tank Resolution Foundation.
There are now 2.3 million EU-born workers in the country, the report said.
Migrant Workers Face Abuse
In 2014, Human Rights Watch published a report saying the United Kingdom should abolish the “tied visa” to protect migrant workers and prevent forced labor.The rights group suggested in the report that indentured servitude is common among Middle Eastern countries.
“Every year, some 15,000 migrant domestic workers arrive in the UK. Many of those interviewed by Human Rights Watch were women from Asia or Africa who previously worked for their employers in the Gulf, and had already experienced abuse there at the hands of their employers,” the report stated.
“Human Rights Watch has documented serious and widespread abuses against migrant domestic workers in the Gulf where gaps in labor laws and the restrictive sponsorship (kafala) system contribute to exploitation. The kafala system ties a domestic worker’s visa to her employer, and gives employers control over whether the worker can change jobs and, in some places, exit the country. The UK’s abolition of the right to change employer risks sending a signal to employers from the Gulf that they can continue to treat their workers as they did under the kafala system, Human Rights Watch said,” it said.
Rights groups have criticized the system due to human rights abuses and exploitation of workers.