The European Commission launched a strategy Tuesday to combat the
trafficking of hundreds of thousands of adults and children who are sold
for sex, servitude or other crimes.
While police across Europe
say the smuggling of humans is on the rise, the number of convictions in
trafficking cases has decreased in recent years, from 1,500 in 2008 to
1,250 in 2010, the EU's executive said.
"This is a real scandal,"
European Union Home Affairs Commissioner Cecilia Malmstroem said as she
presented 40 new measures to battle the scourge.
"Unfortunately
slavery hasn't yet been left to the history books. It is appalling to
see that in our times human beings are still being put up for sale and
being trafficked into forced labour or prostitution," she said.
The
commission's five-year strategy includes the creation of national law
enforcement units specialised in human trafficking and joint European
investigation teams to prosecute cross-border cases.
An estimated
20.9 million people, including 5.5 million children, are exploited for
labour and sex worldwide, according to the International Labour
Organization.
In the 27-nation EU, hundreds of thousands are believed to be victims of human trafficking, the commission said.
The
commission said preliminary data showed that 76% of them faced sexual
exploitation in the EU in 2010 compared to 70% in 2008.
Some 14% were forced into labour in 2010, while 3.0% were made to beg on the streets and 1.0% were in domestic servitude.
The commission said the strategy will complement EU legislation on trafficking that governments must implement by April 2013.
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