Slavery: A Global Investigation
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Slavery is officially banned internationally by all countries, yet despite this there are more slaves in the world today than ever before. In the four hundred years of the legal slave trade around 13 million people were shipped from Africa. Today there are an estimated 27 million slaves - people paid no money, locked away and controlled by violence. Multi-Award winning documentary makers Kate Blewett and Brian Woods - this terrible exploitation with their own eyes.

This film explores three separate industries where slaves are still to be found: the carpet industry in northern India, the cocoa industry in the Ivory Coast, and domestic slavery in Britain and the U.S. At present, approximately 4000-5000 children are missing from Northern Bihar, India. Amongst the missing is Huro, a boy who disappeared at six years old, and hasn't been seen by his family in over five years. The cocoa industry of Cote d'Ivoire produces nearly half the world's supply (over 100 million tons) grown on thousands of small plantations where young men are worked up to eighteen hours a day, unpaid, and beaten if they try to escape. Kate and Brian interview slaves still working in the plantations, as well as a group of young men who had been rescued just days before. Most people imagine that slavery is only found in the developing world, a long way from Western democratic capitals. Kate and Brian found slavery in both Washington and London. A woman named Dora in Washington and another named Reshma in London both tell stories of cruelty, long hours and no payment. Both wish, in their own courageous way, to bring to the public's attention the wrong that has been done to them in order to prevent such abuses happening in the future.

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ptwhyatt2PHILASD.ORG,slavery,ew_32@hotmail.com,modern slavery, Ivory Coast, cocoa,this documentary is so heart breaking, because it seems no matter how badly we want this problem to be gone from humanity, as long as this IS humanity it will never be gone ,slavery today
OUR COMMENTS
Although this film is both surprising and depressing, the filmmakers fortunately look at how slavery can be fought, both at home and abroad. It takes a comprehensive look at a big problem that many would think had been erradicated hundreds of years ago.
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