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**EMBARGO: 17 MARCH 2007, 00:01 GMT**
 

LONDON PHOTO EXHIBITION PUTS GLOBAL SLAVERY INTO FOCUS

 

At least 12 million people worldwide, including in the UK, are in slavery 200 years after Britain abolished the Transatlantic Slave Trade. A striking new photo exhibition -- Forgotten But Not Gone: Slavery and resistance 200 years after abolition -- exposes the global realities of slavery today, opens on 21 March at the.gallery@oxo, South Bank, London.

Photojournalist Pete Pattisson, in collaboration with Anti-Slavery International, reveals the men, women and children in slavery in India, Haiti, Ghana, Burma, Ireland and the UK through photographs and intimate stories. This exhibition is a compelling reminder that slavery is exploitation in its most extreme form and does not discriminate by age, race or sex.

Even though slavery is illegal under international law, no region is free from this abuse and slavery is found in most countries. Today, slavery can even be found in the countries that formed the Transatlantic slave triangle. In Haiti, the first country to free itself from slavery, at least 200,000 children are enslaved as domestic workers. They work 18-hour days, suffering extreme exploitation and abuse. As child domestic Stephanie Sanon, 14, said, "The only time I get to rest, is when I fall asleep."

But the spirit of resistance that brought an end to the Slave Trade lives on. In India, which has more slaves than any other country in the world, bonded labourers are using the law to free themselves. Meetu Singh, who spent 10 years working without pay for a landlord said, "I would rather hang myself than go back into bondage."

Aidan McQuade Director of Anti-Slavery International says: "Pete Pattisson's photographs are a sobering reminder on the bicentenary of Britain's abolition of the Slave Trade of the nature of slavery in the world today. For every single person affected, slavery represents a singularly brutal crushing of their hopes and devastation of their lives. It is vital that governments around the world make eradicating slavery a priority and implement the laws that can achieve this. There is no excuse for what is frequently seen as an historical phenomenon to be a 21st century reality."

 
NOTES TO EDITORS:
 
  • The exhibition is open from 21 March-15 April, 11am-6pm daily, the.gallery@oxo; Oxo Tower Wharf, Bargehouse Street, South Bank, London SE1. Admission FREE. Nearest train/tube: Blackfrairs, Waterloo, Southwark. Information 020 7401 2255; http://www.petepattisson.com and http://www.oxotower.co.uk

  • For further information about slavery or to arrange an interview please contact:

    • Beth Herzfeld, Anti-Slavery International, 020 7501 8934; (out of hours) 07896 783 297 or email b.herzfeld@antislavery.org

    • Pete Pattisson on 07914373661 / pete@petepattisson.com

    • Digital images are available on request from Pete Pattisson.
  • On 25 March, the anniversary of Parliament's passing the slave trade abolition act, there will be a free talk at the.gallery@oxo by Pete Pattisson from 2-3pm.
  • Anti-Slavery International was founded in 1839 by the same abolitionists who led Britain's campaign against the Slave Trade in 1807 and fought for the abolition of slavery in 1833. The charity works for an end to all forms of slavery throughout the world and is the only organisation in the UK working exclusively to end slavery and related abuses.

16 March 2007

NR/3/07