Rishi Sunak is urged to make slavery laws harder to exploit despite warnings it could create more loopholes

  • Changes would mean you need objective evidence rather than a suspicion  
  • Theresa May said it would ‘create another potential loophole’ for criminal gangs
  • The PM has pledged to ‘remove the gold plating in our modern slavery system’

Slavery laws must be strengthened to prevent fraudulent claims, Rishi Sunak has been warned.

This comes despite fears from Theresa May that such a move may create more loopholes for criminal gangs.

Jonathan Gullis, MP for Stoke-On-Trent, said: ‘The Act itself is being exploited by immigration lawyers so that illegal economic migrants can remain in the UK.’

Proposed changes mean case workers will now have to possess objective evidence of modern slavery, rather than a suspicion.

The Prime Minister has already pledged to ‘remove the gold plating in our modern slavery system’

The Prime Minister has already pledged to ‘remove the gold plating in our modern slavery system’

But on Monday Mrs May – who introduced the Act while home secretary – said the changes would ‘create another potential loophole’ for criminal gangs to keep victims, who likely won’t have hard evidence, in slavery.

The Prime Minister has already pledged to ‘remove the gold plating in our modern slavery system’ in order to ‘significantly raise the threshold someone has to meet to be considered a modern slave’.

He told MPs: ‘One of the reasons we struggle to remove people is because they unfairly exploit our modern slavery system.’ This will mean case workers will now have to possess objective evidence of modern slavery, rather than a suspicion. 

Mr Gullis, a Red Wall MP who has consistently backed tougher border control, said reforming the Act ‘can break up the abhorrent people smuggling gangs and deter those seeking to cross the Channel illegally.’ 

More than 40,000 people have crossed the Channel in small boats so far this year, including 90 on Christmas Day. 

A recent report from the right-wing think tank Centre for Policy Studies argued current modern slavery laws are being ‘unscrupulously abused’, adding: ‘Modern slavery legislation has become the first line of defence for many illegal immigrants, with the ECHR as their fallback position.’ 

Advertisement

DailyMail

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

How Eden Golan went from a little girl with dreams of singing to one of the world’s most controversial figures: Israeli Eurovision hopeful tells her story and how she has rehearsed being booed as she performs

She is just 20 years old and has spent her whole life…

Woman dies after being pulled from river as police arrest man in his 40s ‘known to her’

By Richard Percival Published: 10:45 EDT, 25 April 2024 | Updated: 12:01…

Jeremy Hunt is mocked over ‘inflation explainer’ video

Well, that fell a bit flat (white)! Jeremy Hunt is mocked over…

Tory ex-council leader, 69, killed when his all-terrain vehicle flipped over, inquest hears

Tory ex-council leader, 69, was killed when his all-terrain vehicle flipped over…