Gangs
are preying on vulnerable people sleeping rough in UK cities and forcing them
to work for nothing Rough
sleepers are being turned into “modern-day slaves” by criminal gangs operating
across the country, according to one of the UK’s leading charities helping
people living on the streets.
Homeless
men on the steps of a theatre in London, which is among cities in which
criminal gangs have targeted people sleeping rough for forced labour.
Photograph: Ian Nicholson/PA
The homeless, forced to sleep on the mean streets of Great Britain are euphemistically refered to as "rough sleepers". Holy newsspeak!
To me the expression brings about visuals of sleeping in the wilds on a survivor type basis. Where I live, that means being visited by the occasional wandering bear or curious mountain lion. However, in England, "rough sleeping" can lead to far greater dangers than those posed by the innocent omnivores and carnivores of the wilds.
By Jamie Doward and Alex
Binley
Thames
Reach says it is aware of reports that gangs are targeting homeless people in
London, Birmingham, Manchester, Southampton, Dover, Leicester and Luton.
The
revelation comes after a raid on a travelers’ site in Bedfordshire by police
last weekend that led to the arrest of four men and a woman on suspicion of
slavery offences. Police said the alleged “slaves” were mostly English, but
some were of eastern European origin. Detectives said they were all vulnerable
and were either homeless people or alcoholics who had been recruited by
“gangmasters” offering money.
But according to Thames
Reach this was not an isolated incident. The charity said it has been contacted
by 22 central and eastern European rough sleepers who had run away from gangs
this year. It said some were fearful for their lives.
“We have been coming across some extremely disturbing reports from homeless people who have been ‘enslaved’ by criminal gangs across the UK,” said Mike Nicholas, a spokesman for the charity.“Increasing numbers of rough sleepers, many from central and eastern Europe, have told us how they have been held against their will, beaten and forced to work without wages before escaping and ending up on the streets of London.”
Earlier this year Thames
Reach staff found a group of six rough sleepers linked to a slavery ring
operating out of London’s King’s Cross that sparked a police investigation.
The charity said the men
had come from the Czech Republic and were being exploited by a Czech family
based in Birmingham.
One of the men, “Michal”,
told the charity he had been lured to the UK on false promises of paid work. He
claimed that before flying he was drugged with what he now suspects was a
sedative, which the gang claimed was a painkiller to help with his bad back.
He was then driven to a
house in Birmingham where he lived alongside nine other victims of the
four-strong gang who were taken each day by minibus to work at a bakery in
Luton.
Michal told Thames Reach
staff that he worked as a “slave” and all his money was taken from him by the
gang who beat him regularly. He claims he was given poor food such as bread and
butter once a day and that the gang stole his ID and opened a credit card in
his name.
Another man from the
Czech Republic, Wojtek, told Thames Reach he was living on the streets of
London, relying on handouts, when he was approached at a soup run near Victoria
with the offer of a job and accommodation.
He was given a coach
ticket to Leicester where he claims a gang stole his ID and bank and credit
card accounts. He was told that if he tried to escape he would be caught and
beaten.
The claims shine new
light on the influx of eastern European immigrants to the UK. While the number
of rough sleepers from the UK is falling in London, the number of people from
central and Eastern Europe has steadily risen.
Thames Reach has helped
over 1,000 central and eastern European people return home since early 2009. It
says another 1,000 were counted on the streets last year. It says some of those
who returned were victims of violent assaults by gang leaders.
“We need to alert
homeless services and the people using them to the threat,” Nicholas said.
“The embassies and police also need to take the issue more seriously, ensuring the victims get assistance and that this recently exposed menace is tackled. Life as a rough sleeper can be extremely dangerous but the sheer criminality and brutal nature of these gangs has taken the threat of living on the streets to a new level.”
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