Vatican City, 12 September 2014 (VIS) –
The fight against contemporary forms of slavery was the theme of the
address given by Archbishop Silvano Tomasi. Holy See Permanent
Observer at the United Nations, during the 27th Ordinary Session of
the Human Rights Council in Geneva.
The archbishop referred to a number of
tragic forms of contemporary slavery that have recently attracted the
attention of the media and the international community, such as
“massive kidnappings and sale of young girls under the false
premises of religious teachings as is done, for example, by Boko
Haram in Nigeria or by the so-called Islamic State group in northern
Iraq”.
“Some 250,000 children are forcibly
conscripted and even used as “human shields” in the front lines
of armed conflicts”, he continued. However, there are “other,
subtler forms of slavery that deserve specific attention, including
the 5.7 million children who are victims of forced and bonded labour,
domestic servitude, early, forced and servile marriage … and
caste-based forms of slavery, which affect the lives of so many and
are not confined to developing and poor countries”. Factors that
may contribute to the promotion of all forms of slavery include “the
increasing incidence of absolute poverty among many families affected
by the economic crises, the lack of education and illiteracy,
long-term and apparently irreversible unemployment which force people
into the informal-sector work without adequate pay or social
protection, involuntary migration, and human trafficking”.
Although the international community
has already developed international conventions and agreements to
protect against contemporary forms of slavery, the Holy See observer
remarked that greater political will is necessary to ensure the
effectiveness of such instruments and to increase public awareness.
“We need to break the silence about this 'open wound on the body of
contemporary society' and motivate 'men and women of good will who
want to cry out, Enough!'” he continued, noting that Pope Francis
takes every opportunity to denounce the “many abominable forms of
slavery [that] persist in today’s world” and has “joined with
leaders from other major religious traditions to promote the ideals
of faith and of shared human values in order to eradicate modern
slavery and human trafficking ... for all time”.
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