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50 million people lived in 'modern slavery' last year: UN

The United Nations (UN) in Geneva, Switzerland, Sept. 9, 2022. (Salvatore Di Nolfi/Keystone via AP) The United Nations (UN) in Geneva, Switzerland, Sept. 9, 2022. (Salvatore Di Nolfi/Keystone via AP)
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GENEVA -

The UN labor agency estimates that some 50 million people worldwide were living in "modern slavery" - either in forced labor or marriage -- at the end of last year, marking a 25% jump from its previous report five years ago.

The International Labor Organization and partners point to worrying trends such as "commercial sexual exploitation" affecting nearly one in four people who are subject to forced labor and with the poor, women and children hardest hit.

ILO, along with the UN's International Organization for Migration and the Walk Free foundation - a rights group that focuses on modern slavery - reported that 28 million people were in forced labor and 22 in forced marriages at the end of 2021.

The report released Monday said such figures marked an increase of 10 million people living in modern slavery since the last such report was published in 2017, based on figures a year earlier. Two-thirds of the increase pertained to forced marriages alone, it said.

Based on available data, ILO and partners found increases in child and forced marriages in countries like Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Congo, Egypt, India, Uganda and Yemen. But the report said wealthier countries were "not immune" to the problem, with nearly one-in-four forced marriages taking place in high or upper middle-income countries.

Crises including the coronavirus pandemic, climate change and armed conflict have underpinned rises in extreme poverty, unsafe migration, and gender-based violence in recent years, raising the risk of all forms of modern slavery, it said.

All told, more than 2/3 of all forced marriages were found in the Asia-Pacific region -- the world's most populous region -- but the highest number per capita came in Arab countries where nearly 5 in 1,000 people were in forced marriages.

Forced marriage, the report said, is closely tied to "long-established patriarchal attitudes and practices" -- while 85 percent of cases were driven by "family pressure." Regarding forced labor, about one in eight of those affected were children and half of those in commercial sexual exploitation.

"(Modern slavery) is a man-made problem, connected to both historical slavery and persisting structural inequality," said Grace Forrest, founding director of Walk Free, in a statement, as the ILO chief urged a broader effort to fight it.

Director-General Guy Rider of the UN labor agency, which brings together workers, businesses and governments, called for "an all-hands-on-deck approach" and said, "trade unions, employers' groups, civil society and ordinary people all have critical roles to play."

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