Countries with classical slavery. Slaves and slave owners. Human trafficking in the modern world. How do you get into slavery?

Introduced into international circulation the following definitions of slave and slave trade:

1. Slavery means the position or condition of a person over whom some or all of the powers inherent in the right of ownership are exercised.
2. The slave trade is understood to mean all acts connected with the capture, acquisition of any person or with the disposal of him for the purpose of converting him into slavery; all actions connected with the acquisition of a slave for the purpose of its sale or exchange; all acts of selling or exchanging a person acquired for that purpose, and in general any act of trading or transporting slaves.

Slavery is condemned by a treaty of the League of Nations in 1926 and in the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights dated , as well as in all other major documents relating to human rights.

For the past 5,000 years, slavery has existed almost everywhere. Among the most famous slave states are Ancient Greece and Rome, in Ancient China the concept of si, equivalent to slavery, has been known since the middle of the 2nd millennium BC. e. IN Russian literature there was a tradition to identify serfs with slaves, however, despite whole line similar features, slavery and serfdom had some differences. In more late period slavery existed in the US and Brazil. Slavery in the Ancient East had many distinctive features. Modern concept slave does not take into account these differences, the concept serf in human rights is absent and completely coincides with the definition of a slave. In totalitarian states, the largest slave owners were not individual owners, but these states themselves, thus covering up the real situation of slaves by the fact that they are supposedly forced to work in accordance with the laws established by the totalitarian state. Also during World War II, slave labor was widely used in Nazi Germany.

The essence of slavery and the position of a slave

An unresolved problem in the study of the essence of slavery to this day is the lack of development of its popular scientific classification. A direct consequence of this gap is that most people think of slavery as some kind of special component of history. ancient world. At best, people perceive slavery as belonging exclusively to the slave system.

One of the most important criteria for classifying slavery is the factor of the formative subject.

Modern slavery has a significant spread (and, accordingly, a special threat to society) in those cases when it acquires a systemic character, when the main formative subject of enslavement is not an individual criminal individual, but the state.

The emergence of slavery

Division of labor is vital to achieving production efficiency. When organizing such a division, hard (primarily physical) labor is the least attractive. At a certain stage in the development of society (when the development of technology has ensured the production of a larger volume of products by the worker than he himself needs to sustain life), prisoners of war, who were previously killed, began to be deprived of their liberty and forced to hard work on the owner. People deprived of their freedom and turned into the property of the master became slaves.

The position of a slave

The living conditions of a slave are determined only by humanity or the benefit of the slave owner. The first was and remains a rarity; the second makes them act differently depending on how difficult it is to get new slaves. The process of raising slaves from childhood is slow, expensive, requiring a fairly large contingent of “producer” slaves, so even an absolutely inhumane slave owner is forced to provide the slaves with a standard of living sufficient to maintain working capacity and general health; but in places where it is easy to get adult and healthy slaves, their lives are not valued and exhausted with work.

Sources of slaves

  1. At the first stages of development, the only, and later on, a very significant source of slaves for all peoples was war, accompanied by the capture of enemy soldiers and the abduction of people living on its territory.
  2. When the institution of slavery became firmly established and became the foundation of the economic system, other sources were added to this source, above all the natural growth of the slave population.
  3. In addition, laws appeared according to which the debtor, unable to pay his debt, became the slave of the creditor, for some crimes they were punished by slavery, and finally, broad paternal power allowed selling their children and wife into slavery. One of the ways to turn into a slave-serf in Rus' was the opportunity to sell oneself in the presence of witnesses.
  4. There was (and continues to be) the practice of converting free people into slavery through direct unreasonable coercion. Whatever, however, the source of slavery, the basic idea that a slave is a captive was always and everywhere preserved - and this view was reflected not only in the fate of individual slaves, but also in the entire history of the development of slavery.

History of slavery

Primitive society

Slaves were often tortured

Slavery is not originally reflected in human culture. The first sources are found during the period of the capture of Sumer by the Semitic tribes. Here we meet the subjugation of the captured people and their submission to the master. The oldest indications of the existence of slave-owning states in Mesopotamia date back to the beginning of the third millennium BC. e. Judging by the documents of this era, these were very small primary public entities led by kings. In the principalities that lost their independence, the highest representatives of the slave-owning aristocracy ruled, bearing the ancient semi-priestly title "ensi". economic basis of these ancient slave-owning states was the land fund of the country centralized in the hands of the state. Communal lands cultivated by free peasants were considered the property of the state, and their population was obliged to bear all kinds of duties in favor of the latter.

In biblical sources, slavery was described before the flood (Gen.). The ancient patriarchs had many slaves (Gen.,). Slaves were made: people taken prisoner of war (Deut.,), or debtors unable to pay their debts (2 Kings, Is., Matt.), just as a thief is not able to pay for the stolen (Ex.) and married with the face of a slave state (Gen., etc.). Sometimes a person sold himself into slavery due to extreme circumstances (Lev.). Slaves passed from one master to another through sale, and purchase was the most common way to get slaves for oneself.

According to modern ideas, in the era of primitive society, slave ownership was completely absent at first, then it appeared, but did not have a mass character. The reason for this was the low level of organization of production, and initially - obtaining food and items necessary for life, in which a person could not produce more than is necessary to maintain his life. Under such conditions, the conversion of someone into slavery was meaningless, since the slave did not benefit the owner. During this period, in fact, there were no slaves as such, but only prisoners taken in the war. Since ancient times, the captive was considered the property of the one who captured him. This practice, established in primitive society, was the foundation for the emergence of slavery, since it consolidated the idea of ​​the possibility of owning another person.

In intertribal wars, male captives, as a rule, were either not taken at all, or killed (in places where cannibalism was widespread, they were eaten), or accepted into the winning tribe. Of course, there were exceptions when captive men were left alive and forced to work, or used as barter, but this was not a common practice. Few exceptions were male slaves, especially valuable because of some of their personal qualities, abilities, skills. In the mass, captured women were of greater interest, both for childbirth and sexual exploitation, and for household work; especially since it was much easier to guarantee the subordination of women as physically weaker.

Rise of slavery

Slavery appeared and spread in societies that had shifted to agricultural production. On the one hand, this production, especially with primitive technology, requires very significant labor costs, on the other hand, a worker can produce significantly more than is necessary to maintain his life. The use of slave labor became economically justified and, naturally, spread widely. It was then that the slaveholding system was formed, which existed for many centuries - at least from ancient times to the 18th century, and in some places even longer.

In this system, slaves constituted a special class, from which the category of personal or domestic slaves was usually distinguished. Domestic slaves were always at the house, while others worked outside it: in the field, on construction, went for cattle, and so on. The position of domestic slaves was noticeably better: they were personally known to the master, lived a more or less common life with him, and to a certain extent were part of his family. The situation of other slaves, little personally known to the master, often did not differ much from that of domestic animals, and sometimes it was even worse. The need to keep large masses of slaves in subjection led to the emergence of appropriate legal support for the right to own slaves. In addition to the fact that the master himself usually had workers whose task it was to supervise the slaves, the laws severely persecuted slaves who tried to flee from the master or rebel. To pacify such slaves, the most cruel measures were widely used. Despite this, escapes and slave uprisings were not uncommon.

Slave labor and the slave trade were an important part of the extensive economies of medieval Asian states created by nomads, such as the Golden Horde, the Crimean Khanate, and early Ottoman Turkey (see also Raid economy). The Mongol-Tatars, who turned huge masses of the conquered population into slavery, sold slaves to both Muslim merchants and Italian traders who owned colonies in the northern Black Sea region from the middle of the 13th century (Kaffa s, Chembalo, Soldaya, Tana, etc.). One of the busiest labor trade routes led from the Azov Tana to Damietta, located at the mouth of the Nile. At the expense of the slaves taken out from the Black Sea region, the Mamluk guard of the Abbasid and Ayubid dynasties was replenished. The Crimean Khanate, which replaced the Mongol-Tatars in the northern Black Sea region, was also actively involved in the slave trade. The main slave market was located in the city of Kef (Kaffa). The slaves captured by the Crimean detachments in the Polish-Lithuanian state and in the North Caucasus were sold mainly to the countries of Western Asia. For example, as a result of major raids on Central Europe, up to a thousand captives were sold into slavery. Total number slaves who passed through the Crimean markets are estimated at three million people. In the Christian regions conquered by Turkey, every fourth boy was taken from the family, forced to convert to Islam and, in theory, became the slave of the Sultan, although in practice the Janissaries soon became elite troops claiming political influence. From the slaves, the Janissary guard and the Sultan's administration were replenished. The harems of the Sultan and Turkish dignitaries consisted of slaves.

Slavery in modern times

Slavery, almost everywhere in Europe replaced by serfdom, was restored in a new light in the 17th century, after the beginning of the Age of Discovery. In the territories colonized by Europeans, agricultural production was developed everywhere, on a large scale, which required a large number of workers. At the same time, the conditions of life and production in the colonies were extremely close to those that existed in ancient times: large expanses of uncultivated land, low population density, the possibility of farming by extensive methods, using the simplest tools and elementary technologies. In many places, especially in America, there was simply nowhere to take workers: the local population had no desire to work for newcomers, and free settlers were also not going to work on plantations. At the same time, in the course of the development of Africa by white Europeans, it became possible to quite easily get an almost unlimited number of workers by capturing and enslaving native Africans. The African peoples were mostly at the stage of the tribal system or the initial stages of state building, their technological level did not make it possible to resist the Europeans, who had equipment and firearms. On the other hand, they were familiar with slavery even before the arrival of Europeans and considered slaves as one of the commodities for profitable trade.

In Europe, the use of slave labor resumed and a massive slave trade began, which flourished until the 19th century. Africans were captured in their native lands (as a rule, Africans themselves), loaded onto ships and sent to their destination. Some of the slaves ended up in the metropolis, while the majority went to the colonies, mostly American. There they were used for agricultural work, mainly on plantations. At the same time in Europe, criminals sentenced to hard labor were sent to colonies and sold into slavery. Among the "white slaves" dominated the Irish captured by the British during the conquest of Ireland 1649-1651. An intermediate position between exiled and free colonists was occupied by "sold into service" (Eng. indenture) - when people sold their freedom for the right to move to the colonies and "work out" it again there.

In Asia, African slaves were used little, since in this region it was much more profitable to use the large local population for work.

The last to be freed were Negro slaves in Brazil, where the Negroes mixed most with the Portuguese and Indians. According to the census, there were 3,787 thousand whites, 1,954 thousand blacks, 3,802 thousand mestizos and 387 thousand Indians; there were about 1.5 million slaves from blacks. The first step towards the abolition of slavery was to ban the importation of slaves. The slaves of the monasteries and some institutions were freed; in all children born in Brazil were declared free, all state and imperial slaves were freed, and a special fund was established for the redemption of a certain number of slaves annually. All slaves over 60 are freed. Only in followed the complete emancipation of the remaining slaves. This measure served as one of the reasons for the revolution that overthrew the Emperor Don Pedro II.

Ending the slave trade and abolishing slavery

Current state

The prevalence of slavery at the beginning of the XXI century

Currently, slavery is officially prohibited in all states of the world. The most recent ban on slave ownership and the use of slave labor was introduced in Mauritania.

Because the legal law does not currently exist, then there is no classical slave ownership as a form of ownership and a method of social production, except, probably, for a number of underdeveloped countries mentioned below in the text, where the ban exists only on paper, and the unwritten law acts as a real regulator of public life - custom. In relation to “civilized” states, the term “forced, unfree labor” is more correct here. (unfree labor).

Some researchers even note that after the transition of the slave trade to an illegal position, the income from it not only did not decrease, but even increased. The value of a slave, in comparison with the prices of the 19th century, has fallen, and the income that he can bring has increased.

In classical form

In forms typical of a classical slave society, slavery continues to exist in the states of Africa and Asia, where its formal ban took place relatively recently. In such states, slaves are engaged, as they were many centuries ago, in agricultural work, construction, mining, and handicrafts. According to the UN and human rights organizations, the most difficult situation remains in countries such as Sudan, Mauritania, Somalia, Pakistan, India, Nepal, Myanmar, Angola. The official ban on slave ownership in these states either exists only on paper at all, or is not supported by any serious punitive measures against slave owners.

modern slavery

Labor, sexual and domestic "slavery" in modern states

In states often considered to be quite civilized and democratic, there are forms of forced labor that journalists [ Who?] dubbed the stamp "labor slavery".

Its main victims are illegal immigrants or persons forcibly removed from their country of permanent residence. It is not uncommon for people to become slaves who have turned to recruiting firms in their home countries that promise high-paying jobs abroad. It is believed that documents are confiscated from such persons under various pretexts after arriving in the country of destination, after which they are deprived of their liberty and forced to work. In Russia, examples of the use of slave labor by the homeless are known (for example, the gang of Alexander Kungurtsev).

Government and public organizations dealing with human rights issues [ Who?], constantly monitor the development of the situation with slavery in the world. But their activity is limited to stating facts. The real fight against the slave trade and the use of forced labor is held back by the fact that the use of slave labor has again become economically profitable.

Slave trade in Chechnya

During the period of control of the territory of the region by separatists, slave markets operated in Chechnya: in Grozny and Urus-Martan, where people were sold, including those abducted from other Russian regions. IN documentary“Slave Market” of the TV company “VID”, based on the testimonies of the hostages, tells about the circumstances of the abduction and life in captivity. The hostages were kidnapped from North Caucasus, Rostov, Volgograd, Moscow. In particular, the film mentions a case when an order was placed in Urus-Martan for "a 17-year-old blonde, 172 centimeters tall, with a third breast size, a virgin." A week later, the girl was kidnapped in Novorossiysk and brought to Chechnya. Places (“zindans”) where slaves were kept were equipped with bars, chains, bunks, and windows for serving food. According to the authors of the film, more than 6 thousand people were kept in the zindans of Grozny and Urus-Martan. The reason for filming the film was the kidnapping of journalists Ilyas Bogatyrev and Vladislav Chernyaev in Chechnya.

The impact of slavery on the culture of society

From a modern point of view, in the moral life of mankind, slavery had and is having extremely harmful consequences. On the one hand, it leads to the moral degradation of slaves, destroying their sense of human dignity and the desire to work for the benefit of themselves and society, on the other hand, it has an unfavorable effect on slave owners. It has long been known that dependence on people subject to his whims and desires is extremely harmful for the human psyche; the master inevitably gets used to fulfill all his whims and ceases to control his passions. Debauchery becomes an essential feature of his character.

In times of widespread, widespread slavery, slavery had a corrupting effect on the family: quite often, slaves, barely out of childhood, were forced to satisfy the sexual needs of the master, which destroyed the family. The children of the master, being in constant contact with the slaves, easily adopted the vices of both parents and slaves; cruelty and neglect of slaves, the habit of lying and irresponsibility were instilled from childhood. Of course, there were individual exceptions, but they were too rare and did not soften the general tone in the least. From family life, depravity easily passes into public life, as the ancient world shows with particular relief.

The displacement of free labor by slave labor leads to the fact that society is divided into two groups: on the one side - slaves, "rabble", largely consisting of ignorant, corrupt people, imbued with petty, selfish ambition and constantly ready to stir up civil unrest; on the other - " know" - a bunch of rich people, perhaps educated, but at the same time idle and depraved. There is a whole abyss between these classes, which is another reason for the decay of society.

Another harmful effect of slavery is the dishonoring of labor. The occupations given to slaves are considered shameful for a free man. With the increase in the scale of the use of slaves, the number of such occupations increases, in the end, any work is recognized as shameful and dishonorable, and idleness and contempt for any kind of work is considered the most essential sign of a free person. This view, being a product of slavery, in turn supports the institution of slavery, and even after the abolition of slavery remains in the public mind. It takes considerable time to rehabilitate labor in people's minds; Until now, this view has been preserved in the aversion of some sections of society to any economic activity.

Slavery in culture

in the bible

In cinema

see also

forms transitional to serfdom
  • columns
Slave Warriors (Battle Slaves)
  • Athenian police (the police in ancient Athens consisted of government slaves)
professions
  • Lanista
  • Slaver
  • Fugitive slave hunter
slavery laws other

Notes

Links

  • Henri Vallon, The history of slavery in the ancient world. Greece. Rome"
  • Howard Zinn. Creating Interracial Barriers (History of Slavery in America) // Zinn Howard. A People's History of the United States: From 1492 to the Present. - M., 2006, p. 37-55
  • This unsweetened life - Migrants from Uzbekistan were turned into slaves and forced to bake Novye Izvestia cookies 06.08.2008. This savory life Migrants from Uzbekistan were turned into slaves and forced to bake cookies)

At school, we are taught that a slave is someone who is driven to work with a whip, is poorly fed, and can be killed at any moment. IN modern world a slave is one who does not even suspect that he, his relatives and all the people around him are slaves. The one who does not even think that, in fact, he is completely powerless. That his owners, with the help of specially created laws, law enforcement agencies, public services and, above all, with the help of money, can force him to do everything they need from him.

Modern slavery is not the slavery of the past. It is different. And it is built not on coercion, but on a change in consciousness. When from a proud and free person under the influence of certain technologies, through the influence of ideology, the power of money, fear and cynical lies, a mentally handicapped, easily controlled, corrupt person turns out.

What are the megacities of the planet? They can be compared to gigantic concentration camps inhabited by mentally broken, absolutely disenfranchised residents.

As sad as it is, slavery is still with us. Here, today and now. Some don't notice it, some don't want to. Someone is trying really hard to keep it that way.

Of course, there was never any talk of complete equality of people. It's physically impossible. Someone is born 2 meters tall with a chic appearance, in a good family. And someone is forced from the cradle to fight for their survival. People are different, and what makes them different is the decisions they make. The topic of this article is: "The illusion of equality of human rights in the modern world." The illusion of a free world without slavery, in which for some reason everyone unanimously believes.

Slavery is a system of social organization, where a person (slave) is the property of another person (master) or the state.

In paragraph 4 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the UN expanded the concept of a slave to any person who cannot voluntarily refuse to work.

For thousands of years mankind lived in a slave system. The dominant class of society forced the weaker class to work for it under inhuman conditions. And if the abolition of slavery had not been an empty shaking of the air, it would not have happened so quickly and practically all over the world. Simply, those in power have come to the conclusion that they will be able to keep people in poverty, hunger and get all the necessary work for a penny. And so it happened.

The main families, owners of the largest capitals on the planet, have not disappeared. They remained in the same dominant position and continued to profit from ordinary people. From 40% to 80% of people in any country in the world live below the poverty line not by choice or by chance. These people are not handicapped, mentally retarded, lazy, or criminal. But at the same time, they cannot afford to buy a car, or real estate, or worthy protection of their rights in court. Nothing! These people have to fight for their survival, working hard every day for ridiculous money. And this is even in countries with huge natural resources and in peacetime! In countries where there is no problem of overpopulation or some kind of natural disasters. What is this?

We return to the 4th paragraph of the declaration of human rights. Do these people have the opportunity to give up work, move, try themselves in another business? Spend a couple of years on a change of specialty? No!

Between 40% and 80% of the people in almost every country in the world are slaves. And the gulf between rich and poor people is getting deeper and deeper, and no one even hides this fact. The ruling families, hand in hand with the bankers, create a system aimed only at enriching themselves. And ordinary people are left out of the game. Do you really think that real estate should be worth that much in terms of working hours common man? I am already silent about how many territories, in fact, stand idle in almost any country. And it's not about the overpriced real estate, it's about the undervalued price of human life. We are worth nothing to our "masters". We huddle in slums or concrete high-rise chicken coops. Then and with blood we earn bread, clothes and 1 short trip of a semi-homeless vacation to the sea per year. While privileged classes of people (for example, bankers) draw any amount in their pocket with a simple stroke of a pen. Big capital dictates laws, fashion, politics. Forms and destroys markets. And what can an ordinary person oppose to a corporate machine? Nothing. If you have big capital, you can lobby your interests in the government and always win, regardless of the quality and nature of your activities. All these hopelessly flawed car factories, weapons companies, intermediaries in the raw materials industry, all these are the feeding troughs of the elite. Which we serve together and fill for them.

Those in power send us to war, imprison us for debt, limit our ability to move or our right to have weapons. Who are we but slaves? And the saddest thing is that we ourselves are to blame for this no less than those who are now at the helm. Guilty of their blindness and passivity.

Modern slavery takes on sophisticated forms. This is the alienation of a people (community, population) from its natural resources and territories through unfair privatization (monopolization) of the rights to generally useful territorial resources (minerals, rivers and lakes, forests and lands. For example, laws protecting the monopoly ownership of huge resources of a community, people (population) ) territories, regions, countries imposed by unscrupulous rulers (officials, "chosen ones", representative power, legislative power is such a form of alienation that allows us to argue about slave working conditions and monopolies of the oligarchy, in fact, alienation and ownership schemes are implemented due to "defeat in rights” of a part of the population and social groups. The concept of super profits and inadequate wages is hallmark and a private definition of slavery - the loss of the rights to use the natural resources of the territories and the alienation of the share of labor with inadequate pay. Such loss of rights by court decision is used in raider seizures, corruption schemes and in cases of fraud. To enslave, they use traditional debt schemes and lending at inflated interest rates. The main sign of slavery is a violation of the principle of a fair distribution of resources, rights and powers used to enrich one group at the expense of another group and dependent behavior with disempowerment. Any form of inadequate use of benefits and inequality in the distribution of resources is a hidden (implicit, partial) form of the slavish position of certain groups of the population. None of the modern democracies (and other forms of self-organization of the life of society) is devoid of these survivals on the scale of entire states. A sign of such phenomena are the entire institutions of society focused on combating such phenomena in the most extreme forms.

And the situation is only getting worse. Even if we assume that you are satisfied with your position or you can simply endure it. Stop this system of enslavement right now, as it will be even harder for your children to do it.

Modern slaves are forced to work by the following hidden mechanisms:

1. Economic coercion of slaves to permanent work. The modern slave is forced to work non-stop until he dies. The money earned by a slave in 1 month is enough to pay for 1 month's housing, 1 month's food, and 1 month's travel. Since the modern slave always has enough money for only 1 month, the modern slave is forced to work all his life until death. Retirement is also a big sham. The pensioner slave pays his entire pension for housing and food, and the pensioner slave has no free money left.

2. The second mechanism of covert coercion of slaves to work is the creation of artificial demand for pseudo-necessary goods, which are imposed on the slave with the help of TV advertising, PR, and the placement of goods in certain areas of the store. The modern slave is involved in an endless race for "novelties", and for this he is forced to constantly work.

3. The third hidden mechanism of economic coercion of modern slaves is the credit system, with the "help" of which modern slaves are more and more drawn into credit bondage, through the mechanism of "loan interest". Every day the modern slave owes more and more. A modern slave, in order to pay off an interest-bearing loan, takes a new loan without repaying the old one, creating a pyramid of debts. The debt that constantly hangs over the modern slave is a good incentive for the modern slave to work even for meager wages.

4. The fourth mechanism to force modern slaves to work for the hidden slave owner is the myth of the state. The modern slave believes that he works for the state, but in fact the slave works for the pseudo-state, because. The slave's money goes into the pocket of the slave owners, and the concept of the state is used to cloud the brains of the slaves so that the slaves do not ask unnecessary questions like: why do slaves work all their lives and always remain poor? And why don't slaves have a share of the profits? And to whom exactly is the money paid by slaves in the form of taxes transferred?

5. The fifth mechanism of covert coercion of slaves is the mechanism of inflation. The increase in prices in the absence of an increase in the salary of a slave provides a hidden imperceptible robbery of slaves. Thus, the modern slave is impoverished more and more.

6. The sixth hidden mechanism to force a slave to work for free: to deprive the slave of funds to move and buy real estate in another city or another country. This mechanism forces modern slaves to work at one city-forming enterprise and “tolerate” enslaving conditions, tk. The slaves simply have no other conditions, and the slaves have nothing and nowhere to run away.

7. The seventh mechanism that makes a slave work for free is the concealment of information about the real value of the slave's labor, the real value of the goods that the slave produced. And the share of the slave's salary, which the slave owner takes through the accrual mechanism, taking advantage of the ignorance of the slaves and the lack of control of the slaves over the surplus value that the slave owner takes for himself.

8. So that modern slaves do not demand their share of the profit, do not demand to give back what their fathers, grandfathers, great-grandfathers, great-great-grandfathers, etc. earned. Is the suppression of the facts of the plunder of the pockets of slave owners of resources that were created by numerous generations of slaves over a thousand-year history.

Bound in one chain: 10 countries where slavery still reigns

Currently, about 30 million people in the world are in slavery, with 76% of modern slavery occurring in 10 countries. This is stated in the recently published Global Slavery Index.

Slavery includes "practices such as debt bondage, forced marriage, child trafficking and exploitation, and the slave trade and forced labour." Among the factors contributing to the prosperity of slavery are extreme poverty, lack of social protection and wars. In countries such as India and Mauritania, where the proportion of slaves among the population is the highest, the history of colonialism and hereditary slavery also matter. Most often, women and children become slaves.

No. 1. Mauritania

Mauritania has the largest percentage of slaves in the world - 4-20% of the population, or 160,000 people. Here the status of a slave has been passed down from generation to generation, and the slave owner has full power over his slaves and their children. Most of the slaves are women who do both domestic and agricultural work and are also subjected to sexual abuse.

No. 2. Haiti

In Haiti, slaves make up about 200,000 of the country's ten million population. The most famous type of slavery is called restavek (from the French rester avec - to stay with someone - approx. Per.), It is a form of child labor in which children are forced to help around the house. Not all Restave children are slaves, but many are exploited: between 300,000 and 500,000 Haitian children are deprived of food or water and subjected to physical or emotional abuse. The report says that the 357,785 people who are still in internally displaced camps after the 2010 earthquake are "more at risk than others of becoming victims of sex trafficking and forced labor."

No. 3. Pakistan

According to the Asian Development Bank, about 1.8 million people in Pakistan are engaged in forced labor - they are forced to work off debts to the employer. This bondage is often passed down from generation to generation, with workers working for little or no pay. Pakistan has about 3.8 million child laborers between the ages of five and fourteen. Children and families from the "lower classes" are especially often involved in forced labor in the production of bricks.

No. 4. India

India has between 13 and 15 million manufacturing slaves in a variety of industries, and there is widespread sexual exploitation of Indian men, women and transgender people. Child prostitution is especially rampant in places of religious pilgrimage and cities popular with Indian tourists. An estimated 20 to 65 million Indian citizens are in debt bondage.

No. 5. Nepal

Nepal is both a source and an importing country of modern slaves. Slavery takes the form of both brick kiln labor and forced prostitution. Some 250,000 of Nepal's population of 27 million are enslaved, often in debt to the employer. Some 600,000 Nepalese children are forced to work, including in mines and factories, and sexually exploited.

No. 6. Moldova

In 2012, the International Organization for Migration reported that Moldovan men, women, and children are being exploited in Ukraine, Russia, the UAE, Turkey, and Kosovo, where they work in the sex industry, in construction, or work for families. More than 32,000 Moldovans live the life of slaves in various countries.

No. 7. Benin

More than 76,000 people from Benin are engaged in forced labor in homes, on cotton and cashew farms, in quarries and as street vendors. UNICEF estimates that most child slaves in the Congo were brought from Benin, and the International Organization for Migration estimates that more than 40,000 children in the country as a whole have been sold into slavery.

No. 8. Ivory Coast

Côte d'Ivoire is the source and destination of enslaved women and children. As a result of the recent conflict, forced labor threatens more children. the country is the world leader in cocoa production, and in this industry many children are subject to the most brutal forms of hard labor. Over 30,000 children work in countryside, and 600-800,000 on small family farms.

No. 9. Gambia

The most common forms of slavery in the Gambia are forced begging, prostitution and domestic slavery. UNICEF estimates that more than 60,000 children may be slaves, especially orphans and street children.

The victims of forced begging are usually boys who are sent by poor families to study in madrasahs where they are exploited by teachers. Such children are called "talibe". If they return in the evening with insufficient money, they are beaten or starved.

No. 10. Gabon

Children are brought to Gabon from West and Central Africa. Girls are given into domestic slavery or sexually exploited, while boys are forced to do manual labor. Forced marriages and marriages with children are also common. Sometimes young people from neighboring countries come to Gabon themselves to earn money, but end up in slavery. It is also common to sell young girls as servants to relatives or wealthy families. Since Gabon is richer than neighboring countries, the victims of this traditional practice are usually brought there.

"People are taken to order"

Every day, thousands of people flock to Moscow from the regions and countries of the near abroad to earn money. Some of them disappear without a trace, not having time to go beyond the capital's railway station. Novaya Gazeta has studied the Russian market of labor slavery.

Those who fight

Oleg asks not to name the place of our meeting and even the region. It takes place in the industrial zone of a small town. Oleg "leads" me on the phone, and when I get to the sign "Tire Service", he says: "Wait, I'll come right now." Comes in 10 minutes.

- It's not easy to find you.

- That's the whole point.

The conversation takes place behind a plywood change house. Surrounded by garages and warehouses.

I started fighting slavery in 2011, - says Oleg. - A friend told me how she bought a relative from a brick factory in Dagestan. I didn't believe it, but it got interesting. I went by myself. In Dagestan, I went to factories with local guys, posing as a buyer of bricks. At the same time, he asked the workers if there were forced laborers among them. It turned out yes. With those who were not afraid, we agreed to escape. Then we were able to take five people.

After the release of the first slaves, Oleg sent a press release to the media. But the topic did not arouse interest.

– Only one activist from the movement got in touch "League of Free Cities": they have a small newspaper - probably two hundred people read it. But after the publication, a woman from Kazakhstan called me and said that her relative was being held in grocery store V Golyanovo(district in Moscow. - I.Zh.). Remember this scandal? Unfortunately, it was the only one, and even ineffective - the case was closed.

About how much the topic of human trafficking excites Russians, Oleg says this:

– Over the past month, we have collected just 1730 rubles, and spent about 70 thousand. We invest our money in the project: I work at a factory, there is a guy who works as a loader in a warehouse. A Dagestan coordinator works in a hospital.

Oleg Melnikov in Dagestan. Photo: Vk.com

Now in "Alternative"– 15 activists.

- In less than four years, we released approximately 300 slaves, - says Oleg.

According to Alternativa's estimates, about 5 000 people, total in the country - almost 100 000 forced laborers.

How do you get into slavery?

The average portrait of a Russian forced laborer, according to Oleg, is as follows: this is a person from the provinces, who does not understand labor relations, who wants to a better life and ready to work for anyone.

- A person who came to Moscow without a specific plan, but with a specific goal, can be seen immediately, - says Oleg. - Recruiters work at the capital's railway stations. Most active - in Kazan. A recruiter approaches a person and asks if he needs a job? If needed, the recruiter offers good earnings in the south: from thirty to seventy thousand rubles. The region is not named. They say about the nature of the work: “handyman” or something else that does not require highly qualified. The main thing is a good salary.

For the meeting, the recruiter offers a drink. Not necessarily alcohol, you can also tea.

- They go to the station cafe, where there are agreements with the waiters. Barbiturates are poured into the cup of the recruited - under these substances a person can be unconscious for up to a day and a half. After the drug has begun to act, the person is put on a bus and taken away in the right direction.

Oleg tested the scheme of falling into slavery on himself. To do this, he lived at the Kazansky railway station for two weeks, masquerading as a homeless man.

– It was in October 2013. At first I tried to portray a visitor, but it looked unconvincing. Then I decided to play the bum. Usually slavers don't touch the homeless, but I was new at the train station, and on October 18, a man who introduced himself as Musa approached me. Said he has good job in the Caspian, three hours a day. Promised 50,000 a month. I agreed. In his car, we drove to the Prince Plaza shopping center near the Tyoply Stan metro station. There Musa handed me over to a man named Ramadan. I saw Ramadan give money to Musa. How much exactly - I did not see.

Then Ramazan and I went to the village of Mamyri, this is near the village of Mosrentgen in the Moscow region. There I saw a bus to Dagestan and refused to go, saying that I know that there is slavery. But Ramazan said that the money had already been paid for me and they must either be returned or worked out. And to calm me down, he offered me a drink. I agreed. We went to the nearest cafe, drank some alcohol. Then I don't remember well. All this time we were watched by my fellow activists. At the 33rd kilometer of the Moscow Ring Road, they blocked the bus from the road, they took me to the Sklifosovsky Institute, where I lay on a drip for four days. I was given a neuroleptic Azaleptin. A criminal case was opened, but it is still under review

– As such, there are no markets, sites where people could be bought, – says the coordinator "Alternatives" in Dagestan Zakir. - People are taken "on order": the owner of the plant told the slave trader that he needed two people - they would bring two to the plant. But there are still two places in Makhachkala where slaves are most often brought and where their owners take them from: this bus station behind the Pyramid cinema And Northern Station. We have a lot of evidence and even video recordings in this regard, but law enforcement agencies are not interested in them. Tried to contact the police - received refusals to initiate cases.

“Actually, the slave trade is not only Dagestan,” says Oleg. – Slave labor is used in many regions: Yekaterinburg, Lipetsk region, Voronezh, Barnaul, Gorno-Altaisk. In February and April of this year, we released people from a construction site in Novy Urengoy.

returned

Andrey Yerisov (foreground) and Vasily Gaidenko. Photo: Ivan Zhilin / Novaya Gazeta

Vasily Gaidenko and Andrei Yerisov were released by activists "Alternatives" from the brick factory on August 10. For two days they traveled from Dagestan to Moscow by bus. With activist Alexei, we met them on the morning of August 12 at the parking lot of the Lyublino market.

- Came to Moscow from Orenburg. At the Kazansky railway station, he approached the guard and asked if they needed employees? He said that he did not know and that he would ask the chief, who was not in place at the moment. While I was waiting, a Russian guy came up to me, introduced himself as Dima and asked if I was looking for a job? He said that he would get me a job as a security guard in Moscow. Offered to drink.

Andrei woke up already in the bus, two more slaves were traveling with him. All were brought to the Zarya-1 plant in the Karabudakhkent region of Dagestan.

- At the plant, everyone works where the owner says. I carried bricks on a tractor. I also had to work as a loader. Working day from 8 am to 8 pm. Seven days a week.

“If someone gets tired or, God forbid, an injury, the owner doesn’t care,” says Vasily and shows a huge ulcer on his foot. When I Jangiru(that was the name of the owner of the plant, he died a month ago) showed that my leg was swelling, he said: "Apply plantain."

No one treats sick slaves in brick factories: if the condition is very serious and a person cannot work, he taken to the hospital and left at the entrance.

“The usual food for a slave is pasta,” says Vasily. But the portions are big.

At Dawn-1, according to Vasily and Andrey, they worked forcibly 23 person. They lived in a barracks - four in one room.

Andrew tried to run. He did not go far: in Kaspiysk he was caught by a brigadier. Returned to the factory, but did not beat.

Relatively mild conditions at Zarya-1 (fed tolerably and not beaten) are due to the fact that this plant is one of four legally employed in Dagestan. In total, according to Alternativa, about 200 brick factories, and the vast majority of them are not registered.

In illegal factories, slaves have much less luck. Archived "Alternatives" there is a story of Olesya and Andrey - two prisoners of the plant, codenamed "Crystal" (located between Makhachkala and Kaspiysk).

“They didn’t beat me, but strangled me once,” Olesya says under video recording. - It was foreman Kurban. He told me: “Go, carry buckets, bring water to water the trees.” And I replied that now I will rest and bring it. He said that I could not rest. I continued to get angry. Then he began to choke me, and then promised to drown me in the river.”

Olesya was pregnant by the time she fell into slavery. “Having learned about this, Magomed, the manager of the plant, decided not to do anything. After some time, due to hard work, I had problems in the female part. I complained to Magomed for more than two weeks before he took me to the hospital. The doctors said that there was a very high chance of a miscarriage and demanded that I be left in the hospital for treatment. But Magomed took me back and made me work. When I was pregnant, I carried ten-liter buckets of sand.”

Volunteers "Alternatives" managed to free Olesya from slavery. The woman kept the child.

“The release of people does not always resemble some kind of action-packed detective story,” activists say. “Often, the owners of the factories prefer not to interfere with us, because the business is completely illegal and does not have serious patrons.”

About patrons

According to the volunteers "Alternatives", human trafficking in Russia does not have a serious "roof".

“Everything happens at the level of district police officers, junior officers, who simply turn a blind eye to problems,” says Oleg.

The Dagestan authorities expressed their attitude to the problem of slavery in 2013 through the then Minister of Press and Information Nariman Hajiyeva. After the activists of "Alternativa" freed the next slaves, Hajiyev said:

“The fact that slaves work in all factories in Dagestan is a kind of stamp. Here is the situation: activists said that two factories in the village of Krasnoarmeisky are holding captive citizens from central Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. We asked the operatives of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for the Republic of Dagestan to verify this information, which was done within just a few hours. The operatives arrived, gathered teams, found out who the visitor was. And the word "slaves" was more than inappropriate. Yes, there were problems with salaries: people, in general, were not paid, some really did not have documents. But they worked voluntarily ... "

"Money? I buy everything for them myself."

Volunteers "Alternatives" handed over to the Novaya correspondent two telephones, one of which belongs to the owner of a brick factory, where, according to activists, involuntary labor is used; and the second - to the reseller of people.

“I have absolutely no idea what you mean. I Help People Find Jobs - Dealer Nicknamed "Mage-merchant" He responded to my call quickly. “I don’t work in factories, I don’t know what’s going on there. They just ask me: help find people. And I'm looking.

About the barbiturates mixed into the drinks of future slaves, the "merchant", according to him, did not hear anything. For "help in the search" he receives 4-5 thousand rubles per capita.

Magomed nicknamed "Komsomolets", who owns a plant in the village of Kirpichny, having heard the reason for my call, immediately hung up. However, in the archives

The Australian Walk Free Foundation, created by billionaire Andrew Forrest with the support of actor Russell Crowe, annually measures the state of slavery on planet Earth. It was they who, after a survey of forty-two thousand people in twenty-five countries of the world, found out that they are living in the world right now. Self-publishing "My friend, you are a transformer" contacted Katharine Bryant, scientific director and European representative of the organization, and discussed whether the slavery of the 21st century surpasses the golden age of the slave trade in scale.

Your 2016 study says there are about forty-six million slaves in the world; do you have more recent data?
This is indeed the most recent report to date, and we are still noticing that 45.8 million people in the world live in modern form slavery. However, towards the end of September, we are going to release new reports in collaboration with the International Labor Organization, so we will provide updated figures, but at the moment we are still relying on the number of 45.8 million: there are slaves in every country on the planet.

What forms of slavery do you include in this figure? What phenomena do you understand as slavery?
Modern slavery for us is a general term that includes various forms of extreme exploitation, including slave labor, forced marriage and commercial sexual exploitation. By slave labor, we mean situations where a person is forced to work and he is not able to avoid this situation. Under forced marriage, we consider children and adults who are not able to give voluntary consent to marriage. All types of slavery have one common feature - it is exploitation in the highest degree from which the individual cannot rid himself or voluntarily leave.

The most common type of slavery is forced labor, which includes various aspects: commercial, sexual exploitation, forced prostitution, state forced labor - for example, in prisons or the army. There are also many examples of forced labor in the private sector of the economy.

If we compare the number of modern slaves as a percentage of the total population of the Earth, what do we see - is the number of slaves increasing or decreasing compared to the heyday of slavery?
This question is hard to answer. If we look at the 19th century transatlantic slave trade, we believe that the number of people in slavery today is actually much higher. However, our judgment is limited, because prior to the 19th century the records of the slave trade were not so clear, so it's hard to say if more people are in slavery today than ever before, but yes, they are definitely more than during the time of the transatlantic slave trade.

The most common form of slavery is forced labor.

Describe the portrait of a modern slave.
Modern slavery looks different in every country. It is important to remember that slavery does indeed occur in any one of the 167 countries that make up our Global Slavery Index. There are men who are forced to fish on fishing boats. We found a lot of evidence of men being kidnapped from Burma, smuggled across the border into Thailand, and forced to work on fishing boats that never entered port. In the European part, there are cases of refugees who fled the war from Syria or Libya, were subjected to human trafficking and were turned into sexual slavery. We are particularly concerned about refugee children who have been exploited throughout Europe and disappeared from refugee programmes. In Russia Central Asia we also see cases of forced labor and marriage. In Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, forced labor is state-sanctioned: people are forced to collect coal, brides are kidnapped, and they are forced to marry a certain person. So there are many types of slavery, but again: the common factor is that the individual cannot escape this situation.

And what does a modern slave owner look like?
In the cases of missing emigrants in Europe, these slave owners are members of organized crime, they benefit from the sale and purchase of slaves because they perceive them as an affordable and disposable commodity. More traditional forms, historical forms of slavery where there is a "master" and his children inherit slaves, in places like Mauritania in West Africa. In other countries, slave owners can make quick profits at the expense of slaves, either in the supply chains of multinational corporations or in more informal structures: for example, in South Asia there are many cases of indentured labor in the brick industry, where a person is forced to work for free until he pays off a debt. Sometimes these debts are passed down from generation to generation.

Modern slavery affects corporations around the world. Fortunately, in Europe, as well as in the UK, US, Australia and Brazil, governments are beginning to take steps to require merchants and multinational corporations to monitor their own supply chains, looking for evidence of modern-day forced labor. We also welcome the requirement for businesses to publish reports and statements outlining what they are doing to prevent forced labor. We support and encourage other countries to take similar action.

What is the current situation with slavery in former colonial countries?
There is information confirming the existence of slavery in every country in the world, including the former countries of the English Empire. In Australia, where the Walk Free Foundation is headquartered, we estimate that about 3,000 residents experience various forms of modern-day slavery. In countries such as Australia and the UK, it is mainly emigrants and displaced workers who are exploited. This can be seen in various areas: for example, a person who came to the country to get married is forced into domestic slavery, or a person is there on a temporary visa that does not provide him with sufficient labor protection. In India, the population is exploited in informal structures, such as fishing enterprises, which do not have a large number of legal acts, unlike other organizations.

in 2012 the income from modern slavery was $165,000,000,000

Which country has the worst situation with slavery?

In 2016, the highest percentage of the population subject to modern slavery was recorded in North Korea- there 4% of the population are in slavery, engaged in forced labor in prisons and camps. The situation is also bad in Poland and Russia, with a high percentage of slavery observed in countries such as Uzbekistan, Bangladesh, India and conflict zones around the world.

How much money is spinning in this area?
According to our data, in 2012 the income from modern slavery was 165,000,000,000 dollars - obviously, this is an incredibly profitable business. On the other hand, what is interesting is that very few financial resources are used to fight slavery. So for the time being, slavery brings in a lot of income, and on average only $120,000,000 a year is spent on fighting it.

How can you fight slavery?
In our assessment of the work of the governments of one hundred and sixty-one countries in the world in the fight against slavery, we include many different aspects of good and effective methods struggle, such as victim assistance programs, criminal justice measures, the existence of anti-slavery laws, coordination and accountability mechanisms, rapid response to risks, and the role of commercial enterprises. Therefore, we argue that the best government response to modern slavery should cover all of these aspects. The government should train law enforcement agencies to combat slavery, study all forms of modern slavery, pass laws, cooperate with other governments to ensure a transnational approach to this problem. The government should also make sure that it provides security for its population and employees. Assistance can take the form of correct labor laws and inspections to detect any cases of forced labour. Finally, we strongly encourage businesses and governments to work together to try and explore modern day slavery.

Based on our research, the state of North Korea is the most loyal to slavery. There are many cases and examples of forced labor in labor camps, and forced labor is used as a punishment for political prisoners. Even more interesting is the use of forced labor by North Koreans in Europe. Leiden University research in 2015 found that North Koreans were exported to Europe, where they were forced to work and paid meager wages, with little or no freedom while working. In North Korea, the state does little to nothing to prevent slavery and forced labor, and in some cases even actively promotes slavery.

Does the Walk Free Foundation only keep statistics or does it somehow contribute to the improvement of the situation in the world?
Our foundation was founded in 2012 by Australian businessman Andrew Forrest after his daughter, Grace Forrest, volunteered in orphanage in Nepal, where she learned that most of the children from that orphanage were victims of the sex trade and were sold from Nepal to India. Grace raised this issue with her family, and they decided to study what was going on in the anti-slavery and anti-slavery sectors around the world and identify where they could make the most difference. As a result, they realized that anti-slavery organizations lacked funding, trade enterprises were not very interested in fighting this issue, and there was very little research on this topic. As a result, they founded the fund and the Global Slavery Index, where I work. We are trying to determine the number of people around the world subject to modern slavery and find out what governments are doing to combat it; we also cooperate with many UN agencies.

We mainly focus on estimating the number of people in slavery, but also provide very specific policy advice on what governments should do to respond. So, in addition to identifying and raising awareness of the extent of the problem, we are also trying to provide the tools to deal with it. We are now preparing our new report, and in it we will devote a separate chapter to the role of business in the rise of modern slavery and explain what business can do now to expose the exploitation of labor in their ranks.