India has the largest slave population in the modern world with over 14 million slaves
A recent report revealed over 14 million adults and children are trapped in modern slavery in India today.
The 2014 Global Slavery Index collected data on 167 countries, each of which was cited as having some percentage of slavery affecting its population. In total, a staggering 35.8 million people are reportedly enslaved worldwide.
The three countries
with the highest levels of slavery when population is taken into account
were Mauritania with 4%, just under 4% in Uzbekistan, and Haiti's 2.3%.
Qatar, currently set to host the World Cup in 2022, was fourth with
1.4% of its population considered as living in slavery.The 2014 Global Slavery Index collected data on 167 countries, each of which was cited as having some percentage of slavery affecting its population. In total, a staggering 35.8 million people are reportedly enslaved worldwide.
In sheer numbers, India's 14.3 million reveals the prevalence of slavery in the country, making up nearly 40% of the number of people in slavery worldwide. The next highest modern slave populations were found in China with 3.2 million and Pakistan with 2.1 million.
Europe was not omitted from the report, with the highest percentages of modern slavery being found in Moldova and Russia. Moldova was 15th when countries were ranking by percentage with 0.9 per cent, while Russia reached 0.7 percent, translating to roughly one million people enslaved in the country today.
Published last year by Walk Free Foundation, a "global human rights organisation dedicated to ending modern slavery", the 2014 Global Slavery Index defines 'enslaved' and 'slavery' by including the presence of human trafficking, debt bondage, forced labour, forced or servile marriage and commercial sexual exploitation.
"There is an assumption that slavery is an issue from a bygone era. Or that it only exists in countries ravaged by war and poverty. These findings show that modern slavery exists in every country," Andrew Forrest, Chairman and Founder of Walk Free Foundation, said. "We are all responsible for the most appalling situations where modern slavery exists and the desperate misery it brings upon our fellow human beings. The first step in eradicating slavery is to measure it, with that critical information, we must all come together – governments, businesses and civil society – to finally bring an end to the most severe form of exploitation.
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