Screenshot 2024-09-22 at 22.21.04.png

Press office: 020 3883 4384 (Mon-Thurs 9.30-5.30)
Email: press@atleu.org.uk
For out-of-hours media queries, please send us an email.

Please note that these contacts are for journalists only. If you are looking for advice, please visit our legal help page or call the modern slavery helpline on 0800 808 3733.

News News

New draft regulations risk excluding survivors from identification and support

A new joint briefing by ATLEU, ECPAT UK, FLEX, Helen Bamber Foundation, and Hope for Justice outlines our concerns about the draft Slavery and Human Trafficking (Definition of Victim) Regulations 2022 which:

  • Are highly complex and do not align with international law

  • Do not distinguish between adult and child victims

  • Leave victims at risk of further exploitation and re-trafficking.

Read More
News News

Devastating consequences of the Nationality and Borders Bill

If Clause 62 of the Nationality and Borders Bill is allowed to pass in its current form it will have devastating consequences for those who have been subjected to and survived modern slavery. It will also further undermine the UK’s efforts to identify and prosecute the criminals who perpetrate this appalling crime. For a government that genuinely wishes to tackle this crime “it does not make any sense at all” (Lord Dubs).

Read More
News News

Vulnerable victim of slavery catches Covid after being forced to report weekly during lockdown

At the age of just 14, Rebecca was groomed, physically assaulted and raped, then forced to sell drugs by organised crime groups. Although she was identified as a potential victim of trafficking, Rebecca was forced to report to the Home Office throughout lockdown. She contracted Covid in December, quickly followed by her father and sister. Her sister was heavily pregnant and had to be put into an induced coma while her baby was delivered prematurely. She was unconscious for almost three weeks as her baby began life in intensive care. Rebecca is still required to report each week.

A new report released today by the Anti Trafficking and Labour Exploitation Unit, reveals how reporting in person directly threatens survivors’ physical safety and sense of security.

Read More
News News

Survivors still facing major barriers to accessing legal advice

Ileara was born in Nigeria. She was approached by someone who promised they could find her work in the UK as a hairdresser. On arriving, she was taken to a flat and told she would have to work as a prostitute to repay the debt she owed them for bringing her here. The traffickers made threats to kill members of her family back home. She was forced into sex work in the UK for nearly a year before escaping.

Before coming to ATLEU, the Home Office decided she was not a victim of trafficking.

Read More
News News

ATLEU response to The New Plan for Immigration

Modern slavery has no place in the New Plan for Immigration and risks creating policy which overlooks the needs of survivors who are first and foremost, victims of crime. Based on the limited information the government has provided, we fear that these proposals, if implemented, will put survivors at a higher risk of detention, exploitation and re-trafficking.

Read More

‘I think you are the first people who have helped me.’
ATLEU client