workerexploitation
Countries in Europe and Central Asia are estimated to make $84.2 million (€78.1) in illegal profits from forced labour every year, according to a recently published report by the International Labour Organization (ILO). Victims from 51 European and Central Asian countries – including Germany, Italy, Russia, Spain, Albania and Uzbekistan – clocked in the highest estimation of illegal profits per victim, sitting at roughly €19.7 million. The European Commission (EC) describes forced labour as individuals threatened with violence or intimidation to work or who have been forced to work through ind...
Euronews (English)
The UN labour agency Profits and poverty report said forced sexual exploitation was to blame for three-fourths of the take from a business that deprives migrants of money they can send home, swipes jobs from legal workers, and allows the criminals behind it to avoid taxes. After sexual exploitation, the sectors with the highest illegal profits are industry (€32 billion), services (€19 billion), agriculture (€4.6 billion), and domestic work (€2 billion). Total annual illegal profits from forced labour are highest in Europe and Central Asia (€77 billion), followed by Asia and the Pacific (€57 bi...
Euronews (English)
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