Interpol
want people to follow Didier Drogba in communicating with young African players
|
●An estimated 1,000 African children a year are
tricked into fake football trials ●Traffickers bring them to
Europe and then take their money and abandon them ●Many of the children are
sold into slavery and vanish off the radar completely ●
Traffickers
worm their way into junior football clubs in Africa or use social media ●An expert panel convened
at the European Parliament to discuss the problem ●Baroness Young of Hornsey
admitted young people are being 'let down'
An estimated 1,000
African children a year are tricked into coming to Europe for non- existent
football trials by traffickers who take their money and abandon them.
Baroness
Young of Hornsey hit out against traffickers who lure children to fake
football trials
|
The
true scale of the problem may be even higher because many of the children, who
arrive on false passports, are sold into slavery and vanish off the radar.
Some
are brought into the UK by traffickers, who worm their way into junior football
clubs in Africa’s most impoverished nations or sometimes simply contact them on
social media, telling them they can earn a fortune in the Premier
League.
An
expert panel convened at the European Parliament to discuss the problem ahead
of EU anti-trafficking day on Wednesday, has heard that football has failed to
deal with the problem.
‘We
cannot allow sport to be implicated in this crime,’ said Baroness Young of
Hornsey, who has campaigned against modern slavery. ‘Our own young people will
not like that we are allowing this to happen. We are letting them down by
allowing it. We must commit to doing something concrete.’
The
panel of 70 people, convened by the Mission 89 charity, heard that FIFA’s
decision to end licensing of agents in 2015 had contributed to the problem, by
leaving parents with no way of knowing if their children are being preyed upon
by criminals masquerading as professionals.
James
Johnson, FIFA’s head of professional football, said: ‘It’s not worked so the
decision is to bring it back.’
But
those trying to fight trafficking have also described a reluctance among some
clubs to let academic experts speak to young African players, to better understand
who the traffickers are and how they operate.
Some
star players are less willing than others to help communicate the threat of
traffickers. Interpol want more to follow the lead Didier Drogba (above) has
set in communicating with young Africans.
Premier
League director of international football relations Mathieu Moreuil told the
panel, who met at the European Parliament in Brussels: ‘Are there any cases of
child trafficking in the UK? Probably. But hopefully not in the Premier
League.’
FIFA
have introduced rules designed to prevent trafficking, which ban the movement
of under 18s in most cases.
Both
Manchester City and Chelsea have been charged with breaching them. The City
investigation centres on claims by George Davies, from Sierra Leone, and Ghanaian
Dominic Oduro.
The Chelsea inquiry centres on Bertrand Traore, from Burkina Faso, and Domingos Quina from Guinea-Bissau. Both clubs deny wrongdoing.
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