News Brief

Christians urge Home Office to reconsider human trafficking budget cuts

By agency reporter
14 Nov 2008

Premier, the Christian Media Group, is launching a public plea, calling on the Home Office to reconsider budget cuts at the Met Police's Human Trafficking Department as part of their Not For Sale campaign against sexual slavery.

"We're asking the Home Office to seriously reconsider it's budget cuts on human trafficking," said Premier Presenter and spokesperson for Not For Sale, Maria Toth. "It is estimated that 10,000 women are brought into the UK each year, to be held against their will and forced to work as sexual slaves."

"With these cuts, the UK's largest dedicated human trafficking unit will close next year and these women and children who are already in a perilous situation will suffer."

Premier Media Group have been campaigning against sexual slavery in the UK through their Not For Sale campaign over the last three months. The Christian organisation has already obtained over 30,000 signatures protesting against newspapers publishing adverts for sexual services with trafficked women.

Premier are now gathering letters of protest to MPs, calling for a change in the law that would see the buying of sex to become illegal and the protection of trafficked women to be established.

"The announcement of budget cuts by the Home Office is a huge step back for the fight against human trafficking and our Not For Sale campaign." Premier's CEO, Peter Kerridge said, "I can only hope that Home Office will reconsider their decision."

The Human Trafficking team was set up just one year ago and focuses on targeting gangs who bring women and children into the UK and then force them into a life of sexual slavery or hard labour.

Now the Home Office will cut the Human Trafficking Team's budget from an annual £4m to £1.7m.

"It is notoriously difficult to prosecute the gangs responsible for trafficking women and children into the UK and I can only imagine the situation will be worsen now the Home Office has announced these budget cuts." Toth said.

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