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Vietnamese children trafficked into cannabis trade

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Children of the cannabis trade


Children of the cannabis trade
An investigation into how Vietnamese children trafficked to work in the UK's cannabis trade are prosecuted as criminals.
People and Power Last Modified: 14 Dec 2011 09:11


Children of the cannabis trade investigates how Vietnamese children forced to work underground in the booming cannabis trade, held hostage by debt and poverty, are often prosecuted as criminals rather than victims of trafficking when discovered.

With the Vietnamese government now announcing a nationwide push for export labour, and the increasing demand for home-grown cannabis in the UK, the exploitation of Vietnamese children for criminal profit in the drugs industry is a disturbing trend that shows no signs of abating.

Here Mei-Ling McNamara, the producer of this episode of People & Power, writes about the making of Children of the cannabis trade.

For almost a decade, police in Britain have been struggling to cope with an explosion of criminality connected to the country's flourishing but illegal cannabis trade. This has grown rapidly in recent years because of a huge rise in the number of secret indoor cannabis farms - hidden away in suburban dwellings and disused premises across the country. As the authorities shut down more of these operations every year, so more spring up in their place - many of them tied into an expanding network of organised crime, corruption and violence.

Back in 2004, the police made an especially sinister discovery about the trade - that Vietnamese children and teenagers were being trafficked across the world for use as slave labour in the farms. Remarkably, Vietnamese crime gangs run many of the illegal cannabis operations in the UK and often use children - exploitable because their families are in debt bondage to moneylenders in their native country - to work on a production process that exists to meet spiralling demand for the drug on the streets of Britain.

The cannabis farms can be extraordinarily profitable, but little if any money is lavished on the premises or on the conditions under which the children toil. Set up in private residences or industrial sites, often gutted for the purposes, the operations can involve thousands of indoor cannabis plants.

Boys and girls - some as young as 13, many not older than 16, are forced to work as 'gardeners', trapped inside the buildings, 24 hours a day, tending and watering the plants behind blacked-out windows with no ventilation. Eating, sleeping and working under heat lamps and exposed daily to toxic chemicals, they run a constant risk of electrocution and fire. And all the time they face the violence, intimidation and extortion of gang members who are determined to wring everything out of them until their debts are paid off - if that day ever comes.

But when the police identify and raid the premises - and such raids are increasingly common - the plight of these young people is far from over. More often than not they are treated as offenders in the narcotics business, rather than as potential victims of trafficking.

Moreover, as many of them are psychologically disturbed by the emotional and physical trauma they have experienced, they are often terrified of revealing their stories to the police - not least because of fears that if they talk, their family members back in Vietnam will be punished for their failure to pay off outstanding debts owed to moneylenders connected to the gangs.

A vicious cycle

Vietnamese children now make up the largest group of children being trafficked into the UK, primarily for exploitation in the cultivation of cannabis. According to the UK government's CEOP organisation (Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre), nearly 300 children per year are trafficked into the country - and nearly a quarter can end up on cannabis farms.

If they are recovered by authorities they are under extreme pressure to abscond from care, with traffickers often making threats. Once bailed or released from custody, nearly two-thirds of Vietnamese children go missing from local authority care soon after.

According to anecdotal reports from care advisers, some are re-trafficked and return to a new cannabis farm, while others go back to their traffickers to pay off debts and avoid deportation. The threat of violence against a child or their family members is used as a powerful tool to ensure cooperation.

Many Vietnamese minors have been charged, prosecuted and sentenced for the production and supply of cannabis, but only 58 children last year were deemed trafficked when found in these environments. And to date, there have been no known convictions of Vietnamese criminals who have trafficked children into the UK for the purpose of cannabis cultivation.

Networks may specifically recruit children, as they are less likely to be detained or accommodated in secure premises then adults and are able to re-enter exploitation with relative ease.

UK's cannabis explosion

Ten years ago, only 11 per cent of the marijuana used in the UK was grown domestically. Now that figure has grown to nearly 90 per cent. The cannabis trade is so lucrative, authorities say, that they fear the mass surplus is even being exported to EU countries.

Last year, UK law enforcement uncovered 1.3 million cannabis plants worth an estimated $410m. One house can produce cannabis worth up to $500,000 or more a year and during 2010, the police found nearly 7,000 factories during raids - the number has increased by 900 per cent in the past six years.

The UK authorities estimate that 75 per cent of the criminal gangs involved in this trade are ethnically Vietnamese, although local British and Eastern European gangs are beginning to muscle in. However, research has found that even in these circumstances, Vietnamese 'gardeners' are still used to cultivate the cannabis plants because they are sold on to or taken over by the incoming gang.

Trafficking victims have been found in all regions of England and Wales - most frequently in West Yorkshire, the West Midlands and Greater London. Now some are being discovered in Scotland, and cannabis factories have also been identified in Northern Ireland.

Although an increasing number of police forces are identifying Vietnamese cannabis farms locally, the ability and ease with which networks can relocate at a national level (including the relocation of trafficked children) and thereby evade the police, ensures that the number of children trafficked and exploited in cannabis farms is likely to remain at a high level.

Coercion, recruitment and debt bondage

Vietnam is one of the poorest countries in south-east Asia, and the country is heavily reliant on an estimated $2bn worth of remittances paid by Vietnamese workers overseas. Last year, nearly 100,000 migrants went abroad for work.

In these circumstances the door is wide open for exploitation, both by illegal labour agencies and traffickers posing as potential recruiters for overseas employers. It is not uncommon for Vietnamese labour export companies, most of which are state-affiliated, to charge workers well in excess of the fees allowed by law, sometimes demanding as much as $20,000 up front for the opportunity to work abroad.

Paying such sums back is extraordinarily difficult and Vietnamese expatriate workers and economic migrants are consequently highly vulnerable to debt bondage and forced labour. On arrival in destination countries, many workers find themselves compelled to work in dangerous or substandard conditions for little or no pay with no credible avenues of legal recourse. When the work itself is illegal, as is often the case, then the authorities are the last people to whom the workers can turn for help.

Debt bondage is common, with the trafficking and criminal networks determining the amount of money the bonded worker will have to pay off through unpaid labour. The debt notionally covers travel arrangements, accommodation, food and trafficker fees, but the sums are often inflated and can take several years to work off. In the UK, debt bondage sums have been found to range from between $25,000 and $60,000.

In Vietnam, traffickers, often posing as 'middlemen' for the export labour market, will target isolated children or vulnerable families living in relative poverty. They may make false promises about a better life for the child in the UK, with the opportunity of education or work for the child so that they can support themselves or their relatives back home. A debt will often be placed on the child or their family that cannot afford the travel costs, often secured against a relative's land.

Some of the victims are sent to Russia with fake ID cards and then travel to the Czech Republic, Germany and France, entering the UK by clandestine methods via a seaport. Upon arrival, they are ripe for exploitation by the gangs who bring them straight to cannabis factories. They usually know their families back home and are aware of the debt that must be paid off.

The criminal networks involved in the recruitment, transportation and exploitation of the children are well organised, flexible and generate large sums mainly from the cultivation and wholesale distribution of cannabis.

Agents often provide travel documents but then take these documents off the children once they have been used, recycling them for use with other children. Agents trafficking Vietnamese victims often take back or instruct the child to destroy documentation before entering the UK. Without documentation, it is difficult to question the true identity, age and origin of a child, preventing or delaying removal and protecting the traffickers, thus keeping their trade underground.

Children of the cannabis trade - People & Power - Al Jazeera English
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Götterdämmerung;2402628 said:
You said the first to speak. You spoke first in this thread.

What does this have anything to do with China? The report was done by Al Jazeera. You suffer some kind of China paranoia? Poor boy!

LOL, you're so creative. You lack too much self esteem and can't make up your own lines to say? you must be Chinese living in Germany. I don't think Germans are this stupid. You don't even know how to use the word Paranoia properly. Please stop making a fool of yourself, I respect Germany for their hard work and creativity.
 
LOL, you're so creative. You lack too much self esteem and can't make up your own lines to say? you must be Chinese living in Germany. I don't think Germans are this stupid. LOL

You started with an asinine comment on the topic, and when confronted with your asinen comment, you start to attack the persons. How creative of you. Why don't you make a constructive comment on the subject instead of derailing the topic even if it's uncomfortable for you to face the hard reality of Vietnam?

What do you think about the topic?
 
Götterdämmerung;2402665 said:
You started with an asinine comment on the topic, and when confronted with your asinen comment, you start to attack the persons. How creative of you. Why don't you make a constructive comment on the subject instead of derailing the topic even if it's uncomfortable for you to face the hard reality of Vietnam?

What do you think about the topic?

Obviously, your comment wasn't a constructive one. Otherwise, I wouldn't bother attacking your ignorant mind. You're the one derailing this threat by started a nonconstructive comment against mine. I commented to the article and what does that have to do with you? LOL silly fool. Like I said, please stop making a fool of who you are. My initial comment was sarcastic and you failed to understand sarcasm.

I think cannabis is everywhere. Trafficking kids is as bad as trafficking women. I hear news like this almost everyday in Mexico and the US. I think it's mainly due to the lack of responsibility by the government. Otherwise, this wouldn't happen so often. Believe me, Vietnam is doing just that to fight corruption and put those in power to take on more responsibilities. Reality is reality, I never deny Vietnam has a dark side to it due to Chinese influence. Of course, today Vietnam is doing just that to reduce Chinese influence to the country as much as possible to better ourselves.

News flash:

http://www.vnnnews.net/vietnam-starts-massive-crackdown-on-crimes

The Ministry of Public Security on Friday launched a massive crackdown on crimes across the country.

According to Lieutenant-General Phan Van Vinh, chief of the ministry’s Anti-Crime General Department, from now until February 20 next year, his department’s forces will perform raids on crimes in all fields.

The department will focus on provinces and cities that are criminal hotspots, such as Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City, he said.

Vinh said at the hotspots, they will cooperate with local police to suppress criminal gangs, including those using weapons, robberies and gambling.

Crimes that are expected to become more critical before Tet, Vietnam’s Lunar New Year that starts on January 23, like smuggling as well as food safety and hygiene violations will also be targeted, Vinh said.

By Thai Son, Thanh Nien News
 
Upon arrival, they are ripe for exploitation by the gangs who bring them straight to cannabis factories. They usually know their families back home and are aware of the debt that must be paid off.

The criminal networks involved in the recruitment, transportation and exploitation of the children are well organised, flexible and generate large sums mainly from the cultivation and wholesale distribution of cannabis.




I like what China does to these drug mafia cowards executive them asap and make a example out of them
 
One way or the other, every country has its own problems. It is realy sad for whom used kids as an ATM machine for them.
 
Vietnam is suffering from a crime wave. First, it was Vi et nam ese bri de s being tra f fic ked into South Korea. Then, it was Vietn am ese bab ies being tr affi cked into China. Now it's Vi et nam ese children being traf f i kd into the drug trade.

When will it end?
 
If you or any country surely clean then email me or msg me to join debate.
 
If you or any country surely clean then email me or msg me to join debate.

:rofl:

somebody loves to blur other people images in World views but is so scared of being discussed about their dirty secret ones! :rofl:

Nothing, nothing to tell more about the stereos of the viets! :lol:

That statement above not for you to say to us but we, Cambodian and Chinese, to YOU, vietnamese!

LOOSER!!! :oops::partay:
 
Determined Tiger:

If trash needed I can use 1 keyword then I can have tons of digusting about your great Cambodia. I can't deal these stinky articles but you can. Sorry.
 
Determined Tiger:

If trash needed I can use 1 keyword then I can have tons of digusting about your great Cambodia. But I can't deal these stinky articles but you can. Sorry.

:lol: your viets got your butt hurt just because people lighten your dirty secrets? :lol: why don't you feel the same when your people defame the Chinese ones!?

And did I say my Cambodia? NO!!! I did not say anything like that except your self claim! I just want to do the same to you as you used to behave to the Chinese! Learn to be an adult viets!


My lesson 4 YOU here is: Never spit into the sky, it will drop back to your own shameless face! :partay:
 
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