Prompted by a comment earlier from @LaurenHStarkey let's have a little dive into some of the differences between "smuggling" and "trafficking", and, before we start, both are bad and both can involve exploitation. 1/
In the simplest terms, and we'll get into why this isn't simple in a bit, trafficking, more often than not, is a longer term form of exploitation than smuggling, which is often seen as a one off transaction. 2/
Some people will also add that smuggling is voluntary and trafficking is not. Now, on the surface as a purely technical statement this is kind of true, but people really aren't excitedly looking to be smuggled and the gangs which do so prey on vulnerabilities. 3/
Where there is a clear technical distinction is that smuggling occurs across territorial borders, whereas trafficking can occur within the borders of a state. Trafficking is happening right now across the UK for example, to UK citizens. 4/
Here's where it gets a little murkier though. Yes, technically smuggling is a one off transaction. How do you think people afford it? Here's where exploitation comes in, or at least one way. People can be forced into debt bondage to pay for it for example. 5/
When we look at smuggling in regards to children we also face more complexities. Can a child really give the informed consent for their being smuggled to be classed as "voluntary"? Simple answer, no. 6/
Why is the difference important therefore? We see all the time how news reports, politicians etc, will call channel crossings, which are often, but not always, smuggling, "trafficking". At times it is a simple misunderstanding, at times it is more deliberate though. 7/
Trafficking is very specifically about the exploitation of individuals. That is its sole purpose. Smuggling can create exploitation, and often times does, but it is not an essential component of the action. Does that make sense? 8/
Both are run by criminal gangs. Both can lead to the exploitation of individuals, but trafficking ALWAYS leads to the exploitation of individuals. Despite some definitions though, smuggling is not necessarily "voluntary", so again it gets murkier. 9/
When you conflate the two though you miss key nuances which are important, and this can lead to misunderstanding, and, as with the #nationalityandbordersbill attempts to criminalise innocent people. 10/
Not everyone who crosses the channel in a small boat, for example, is being smuggled or trafficked. We have seen a rise in what are termed "self-facilitated crossings", groups of people getting together and organising the crossing, including obtaining the dinghy, themselves. 11/
When you start to term every crossing as trafficking though you automatically criminalise those people who, due to quite a substantial lack of other options, have no other means of attempting to reach the UK to seek safety, which is kind of a big deal. 12/
98% of people who cross the channel in small boats seek asylum. They are de facto "asylum seekers". Roughly 70% of those seeking asylum get it on first instance or appeal. So we are seeing people who have a genuine need for asylum being called traffickers. 13/
A lot of people dismiss this as just a semantic argument. It isn't though. Trafficking and smuggling are both bad. Trafficking is not all channel crossings though and smuggling doesn't always end with the exploitation of people in the way trafficking does. 14/

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More from @stand_for_all

Apr 8
I have been running through this one in my head all night and still can't find the words to say it properly. A debate is nuanced, layered. There are complexities to be discussed. Calling for the effective eradication of a minority group isn't a "debate". 1/
History is replete with examples of people who claimed that minorities "don't exist", are "fads" even that they are "less than human" or "perverts". When you look back at those examples the people saying those things tend not to be on the right side of history. 2/
For people who claim "it's science" so often I do also wonder how they can't see that when you have a minority which wasn't really measured, or counted, suddenly being so you unsurprisingly get a greater jump when compared to data on other groups who were all along. 3/
Read 17 tweets
Apr 4
The #NationalityAndBordersBill is back in the @UKHouseofLords. The Lords have to retain their previous stance and replace the amendments the commons stripped out. This bill is illegal and inhumane. It will only increase risks to refugees.

parliamentlive.tv/Event/Index/76…
I have a lot of respect for Lord Paddick, but "no-one in their right mind would push back a dinghy" is not a strong enough safeguard against proposed pushbacks to warrant not standing against this policy.
A reminder that the #AntiRefugeeBill, if it becomes law, isn't just down to what this government would do, but what the next and the next. It is never enough in legislation to just say "we won't do that", because even if you won't the next government might.
Read 34 tweets
Mar 19
So people can't even get visas to access the scheme. This is why, rather than cobbling together a hodgepodge plan which puts refugees at yet more risk, the government needs to treat this as an asylum situation and activate protection measures. 1/ #r4today

theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/m…
Instead though they've continued to treat the Ukrainian war as an immigration situation which needs visas, as if people are choosing to come to UK for fun. Asylum and immigration systems are different and include different responses, that's why you can't use one for the other. 2/
Government needs to though, with its cack-handed attempt to privatise protection through #HomesForUkraine scheme. Treating Ukrainians as asylum seekers would show up what a dangerous, illegal, discriminatory and inhumane piece of legislation the #NationalityAndBordersBill is. 3/
Read 4 tweets
Mar 18
Thread: In theory, the new #HomesForUkraine scheme starts working today. As more information comes out the clearer it becomes how unsuitable and ill-prepared it is. Rather than alleviate concerns it has become nigh on inevitable that it will increase exploitation. 1/ #r4today
You can argue "Don't let perfect be the enemy of good", problem is this scheme is neither perfect nor good. If traffickers were to design something to maximize ways to exploit people it would potentially look like this, and it doesn't need to. We already have models which work 2/
Local authorities mechanisms already exist, and as shown in the past, could be activated to provide necessary protection and support through a multi-agency, multi-disciplinary approach, which would meet immediate safeguarding needs. 3/
Read 18 tweets
Mar 15
It's absolutely brilliant that there has been such a huge response from the British public to accommodate refugees, and it is truly disturbing that we are in a place where 44,000 could feasibly to do so without even being DBS checked. #r4today. 1/
Over a number of years the previous "community sponsorship scheme" took about 600 people, so you can't even use that as a basis to argue what will or won't happen with the government #HomesForUkraine scheme. What you can do is look at the evidence and worry about safeguarding. 2/
"Light touch" National approach in the immediacy means people are being properly vetted before they take Ukrainian citizens into their homes. By only later on down the line having more detailed local authority checks you all but guarantee people slipping through the cracks. 3/
Read 12 tweets
Mar 14
Gove's statement light on detail. No timeframe it seems for full implementation. No confirmation of long-term safeguarding. 6 month requirement for sponsors to provide accommodation, leaving open for future disruption, and social media to find matches. Not close to good enough
Any scheme cannot rely on the goodwill of the public. It needs proper frameworks. Use existing local authority frameworks and expand them with genuine investment as an example of how to implement a scheme now.
Currently this scheme still looks likely to minimise the number of people in the immediacy who can reach UK for safety, while putting the responsibility for protection on the public and allowing the government to sidestep criticism,
Read 13 tweets

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