Traffickers lure vulnerable kids out of foster care

UK children's charity Barnado's said 16 percent of children referred to its fostering network had been sexually exploited or abused, and 17 percent were trafficked. File picture: Pexels

UK children's charity Barnado's said 16 percent of children referred to its fostering network had been sexually exploited or abused, and 17 percent were trafficked. File picture: Pexels

Published Nov 16, 2017

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London - Thousands of

traumatised children in foster care in Britain go missing, with

some returning to traffickers who feed them "a web of lies",

charities said on Thursday, urging better protection.

UK children's charity Barnado's said on Thursday that 16

percent of children referred to its fostering network had been

sexually exploited or abused, and 17 percent were trafficked.

"It is well known that there is a greater risk of trafficked

children going missing from care but too often processes are not

put in place to protect children," its chief executive Javed

Khan said in an email to the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

"Children are threatened, manipulated and controlled by

their traffickers who feed them a web of lies leading them to

fear authorities," he said, adding that many vanish within days.

More than 50 000 children in England are in foster care,

Department of Education statistics show, with thousands

disappearing more than once.

Children may abscond because they feel unsafe or isolated,

particularly if they do not speak English.

Some contact their traffickers because they fear reprisals

against themselves or their families, have been made false

promises or believe they have debts to pay, experts say.

Anti-child trafficking organisation ECPAT UK said its

research showed 28 percent of all trafficked children in care

went missing at least once. Vietnamese children were most likely

to abscond, often re-enslaved in nail bars or cannabis farms.

More than 150 Vietnamese children rescued from traffickers

in Britain have disappeared from care and foster homes since

2015, charities said last month.

Having been in various foster homes from the age of three,

British survivor Sarah said she was trafficked for sex at the

age of 12 by a gang in England.

"I was alone and vulnerable ... I saw them as people who

cared about me," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation's

annual Trust Conference on Wednesday, using a false name.

"For the next seven years I was sold every day to many

different men," she said, adding that her school, social

services and other authorities failed to see her plight.

Charities have called for specialist foster carers to be

trained to look after trafficked children and for the setting up

of safe houses with high levels of support and supervision.

"It is vitally important that foster carers are offered the

support and training they need to be able to look after highly

traumatised young people," said a spokesman for Fostering

Network, a charity that supports foster carers in Britain.

At least 13 000 people across the country are estimated by

the government to be living in modern slavery but police say

that the true figure is likely to be in the tens of thousands.

The government has said it is introducing a scheme to give

trafficked children specialist advocates or guardians who could

provide support and reduce re-trafficking risks. 

Thomson Reuters Foundation

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