Hundreds of possible slavery victims identified in Sussex

PICTURE POSED BY MODEL. A woman showing signs of depression.PICTURE POSED BY MODEL. A woman showing signs of depression.
PICTURE POSED BY MODEL. A woman showing signs of depression.
Hundreds of potential slavery victims were referred to police in Sussex last year – and a third of referrals involved children, figures show.

Hundreds of potential slavery victims were referred to police in Sussex last year – and a third of referrals involved children, figures show.

Modern slavery cases soared nationally last year, with the identification of thousands of potential victims meaning referrals for support in 2021 were the highest on record.

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But police chiefs said the data is unlikely to show the true scale of modern slavery and trafficking in the UK and that there is "more to be done" to tackle the issue.

Home Office data shows 417 potential cases of modern slavery were flagged to Sussex Police last year– and at least 140 (34%) of all referrals last year involved child victims.

Where a form of exploitation was recorded, the figures show 17 referrals were linked to labour related exploitation, four sexual and 55 criminal, such as "county lines" activity.

Overall, the number of referrals decreased by 24%, from 548 in 2020.

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Across the UK, more than 12,000 potential victims were referred to police last year – up 20% from 10,600 in 2020 and the highest number recorded since the Government's National Referral Mechanism was introduced in 2009.

Nationally, labour exploitation was most common among adult victims while criminal exploitation, including an increase in "county lines" cases, led to most child-related referrals.

The National Police Chiefs' Council lead for modern slavery, Chief Constable Shaun Sawyer, linked increased referrals nationally to greater awareness, understanding and reporting of the issue.

He said thousands of officers were trained to investigate the issue, adding that forces worked with national and local authorities and specialist organisations to support victims and bring offenders to justice.

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