
Help us to amend the proposed Nationality and Borders Bill
Your MP will soon be asked to vote on the Nationality and Borders Bill and we need you to write to them asking them to support our amendments. Many of the issues faced by survivors of trafficking are little understood. To encourage the government to change its mind we need you to engage with your MP so they know this is a priority.
ATLEU launches ATLAW, a new drive to improve advice for survivors
ATLEU launched their new bespoke training programme, ATLAW this week. The programme is designed specifically for immigration and public law advisers who work under a legal aid contract and are committed to assisting survivors of trafficking and slavery.
Low Pay Commission recommends that the family worker exemption should be removed
After years of litigation and research, ATLEU and partners have made the case for the family worker exemption to be removed. This has led to the important recommendation from the Low Pay Commission today that it is not fit for purpose.
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.
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.
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.
Anti trafficking coalition calls for potential victims of trafficking to have the right to work
We are calling for all potential survivors of slavery or trafficking who are in the National Referral Mechanism to have access to work. This access must not be restricted and should be granted automatically once a person is identified as a potential victim of trafficking.
Our new system is now open for referrals!
ATLEU have now launched their new online referral system to improve survivors’ access to free legal advice.
Survivors of slavery die waiting for their compensation claims to be awarded
Trafficking survivors have died before receiving a single penny of compensation because of the length of time it takes to successfully get through the government’s Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority (CICA) process, according to a new report from ATLEU.
Accessing advice: The barriers
Legal advice is an essential part of the support needed by survivors of trafficking and slavery to escape, recover and rebuild their lives. Survivors need advice and assistance to navigate and engage with the complex systems through which they are identified, access accommodation and support, regularise their immigration status and recover compensation.
ATLEU’s submission to the Independent Review of Administrative Law
Our response to this review is informed by our day to day experience of practising public law and advising survivors of trafficking and slavery and those who help them.
Four new employment judges have worked with ATLEU
Four barristers previously instructed by ATLEU have now been appointed as fee paid employment judges. Niran de Silva, Anna Beale, Akua Reindorf and Louise Price have all represented our clients in some of our most influential cases.