Nearly 28 million people around the globe are estimated to be trapped in jobs so oppressive that they amount to modern slavery.
#TraffickingInc, a new ICIJ reporting collab, examines what is said to be the world’s fastest growing criminal enterprise. 🧵bit.ly/3FpMW2s
2/ #TraffickingInc uncovers the people, companies, and business practices that draw profit from different forms of coerced labor across borders — and the well-known employers and entities that human trafficking is linked to. bit.ly/3DhXk9y
3/ First up in #Trafficking Inc., — an investigation co-reported by ICIJ, @washingtonpost, @NBCNews and @ARIJNetwork reveals that many foreign workers for defense contractors on US military bases in the Gulf are trapped by abusive employment practices. bit.ly/3FiS601
4/ “People have been stuck there for years ... The company doesn’t want to pay new laborers more money,” says Anil Lama, a former IT worker at an American military installation in Kuwait. He's one of dozens of migrant workers we interviewed for this story. bit.ly/3FiS601
5/ The US military operates more than a dozen bases in the Middle East, used to wage wars, fight terrorists and pursue regional geopolitical interests, and is deeply dependent on defense contractors and their legions of migrant hires to keep them running. bit.ly/3FiS601
6/ Foreign workers for defense contractors on at least 4 US military bases in the Gulf say abusive labor practices prevent them from returning home or even looking for better work in the region — an issue that’s been repeatedly flagged in recent years. bit.ly/3FiS601
7/ Migrants seeking work in the Gulf can face onerous debts after paying outside recruiters exorbitant fees.
“Although I knew [the fee] wasn’t legal, I had no choice,” says Dilip Gurung, a Nepali who took a job in Qatar with defense subcontractor KRH. bit.ly/3FiS601
8/ The fees can run up to thousands of dollars and are often financed with high-interest loans, requiring migrants paid as little as $1/hour to work for several years at potentially exploitative jobs, unable to quit before they’ve paid off their debts. bit.ly/3FiS601
9/ Thousands of workers who travel to the Gulf seeking jobs vital for supporting relatives back home – though the pay is often low and the hours long – are also vulnerable due to the local “kafala system,” which gives employers wide control over them. bit.ly/3FiS601
10/@USGAO investigated working conditions at military bases last year, finding that recruitment fees can put workers into “debt bondage” and asking @DeptofDefense to boost oversight of contractors and reporting of internal human trafficking investigations. bit.ly/3FiS601
11/ #TraffickingInc focuses on labor and sex trafficking – both growing global phenomena exacerbated by the pandemic – detailing how immigration laws in many countries make migrant workers vulnerable and highlighting untold stories of hardship and abuse. bit.ly/3NaC5v2
12/ ICIJ partner @gbh investigated human trafficking in Massachusetts, exposing flaws in U.S. protections for trafficked workers and authorities’ failures to punish labor traffickers who prey on vulnerable workers. bit.ly/3gNwuyy
13/ Got a story tip, documents, photos, video clips or leads you want to share with ICIJ and the global reporting team behind #TraffickedInc?
Get in touch at traffickinginc@icij.org or explore other ways to contact us securely. icij.org/leak/
14/ More #TraffickedInc stories will be published by ICIJ and media partners in the coming months.
📧 Sign up for our free email newsletter to get all of our new investigations in your inbox! icij.org/newsletter/
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.@AfUncensored co-founder and ICIJ partner @johnallannamu reflects on the personal risk and mental health challenges he and his family contended with in order for him to publish a #PandoraPapers exposé on the offshore secrets of the most powerful family in Kenya. ⤵️
“Being part of that community of journalists who worked on that, was a highlight of my career. Those are the things that kept me going,” @johnallannamu writes @gijn of his #PandoraPapers reporting experience despite not getting the impact he had hoped for. bit.ly/3gu2CY0
We dug into Cambodia's lost heritage and one of the world’s most elite & secretive trades — the antiquities market — with @washingtonpost & @FinUncovered.
Our latest search on the fate of allegedly looted relics led us to the pages of a luxury magazine. 🧵bit.ly/3w7xMJz
A 2021 @ArchDigest spread on a San Francisco mansion featured a photo of a lavish courtyard with several empty pedestals off to one side.
But our reporters discovered another version of the image showing ancient Khmer sculptures resting there. bit.ly/3w7xMJz
It’s unclear who modified the photo or why, but those sculptures match missing relics that Cambodian officials say were stolen from one of the nation’s most sacred sites years ago — offering clues in a global effort to repatriate 1000s of lost artifacts. bit.ly/3w7xMJz
#UberFiles reveals internal communications between top figures and politicians involved in the company’s aggressive scramble into international markets
🧵Here’s some key excerpts from leaked text messages, emails and more exchanged by Uber insiders. ⤵️ bit.ly/3cVbbsW
1/ Leaked files show that Uber co-founder Travis Kalanick personally ordered staff to hit a “kill switch” to prevent authorities from seizing company documents and downplayed concerns about potential violence against drivers as Uber faced pushback. bit.ly/3nSyR3x
2/ A top lobbyist and source of the #UberFiles leak, Mark MacGann brazenly asked political leaders for favors, cultivated ties to Russian oligarchs, and was involved in discussions to undermine police raids, internal communications show. bit.ly/3nSyR3x
It’s been a few days since ICIJ, @guardian and 40 media partners began publishing the #UberFiles – a global exposé on aggressive tactics the ride-hailing giant used to storm into markets around the world.
🧵 Here’s a roundup of the fallout so far. bit.ly/3yzniD1
🇫🇷 One of the most high-profile officials whose intimate dealings with Uber were exposed in the #UberFiles is now-French President Emmanuel Macron.
Macron issued a rude rebuttal to the findings as opposition politicians call for a parliamentary inquiry. bit.ly/3IEyeEi
🇪🇺 Also in the spotlight is former European Commision VP Neelie Kroes, who became one of Uber’s most trusted advisers, leaked records in the #UberFiles show.
Two dozen European politicians have called for a probe on Kroes’ secret lobbying efforts. bit.ly/3IEyeEi
It’s the second day of #UberFiles revelations as ICIJ, @guardian, and more than 40 global media partners blow the lid on the covert business strategies of one of the biggest and most influential tech startups of our time.
REVEALED: Mark MacGann, a former chief lobbyist for Uber and key player in the company’s efforts to expand into Europe, the Middle East and Africa, came forward as the source of the #UberFiles.
He shares why he leaked the records here: bit.ly/3OXkbMg
#UberFiles show that MacGann brazenly asked political leaders for favors, was involved in discussions about deploying a so-called “kill switch” to cut access to Uber data during police raids, and cultivated ties to Russian oligarchs.
In an explosive new leak, the #UberFiles reveal untold forces that drove the tech company to global dominance — reshaping livelihoods, labor markets and daily transit for people around the world.
Sensitive texts, emails and memos from more than 124,000 internal records detail secret, controversial tactics the ride-hailing giant used to storm into markets across the globe — in the words of Uber executives and insiders themselves.
The leaked #UberFiles records stem from 2013 to 2017, a pivotal period of global expansion for the ride-hailing startup when it was barging into cities in defiance of local laws and seeking to grind the taxi industry and labor activists into submission. bit.ly/3yWVIBn