Brian Iselin, a former soldier and Australian Intelligence officer, told attendees of the 12 April Initiatives of Change Business & Economy (IofC B&E) programme seminar, that he first encountered human trafficking during his time as a federal agent combatting narco-trafficking. Searching for narcotics, he found two baby girls in a sports bag who were meant to be sold for adoption in Vietnam. It was then that he shifted his priority from tackling drugs to tackling modern slavery.
Though he admits the task is an uphill one, and modern-day slavery is on the increase, his passion to eliminate human rights abuses from the business supply chain led him to found Slavefreetrade, three years ago, with a volunteer staff from 20 nations around the globe.
Despite the challenge, Iselin would like us to imagine that it is possible to rid the world of exploitation in the supply chain, if we are all made aware of how far these abuses reach. The issues are all pervasive, he says, and the purchasing public are, often unwittingly, complicit. ‘You touch modern slavery every day more often than you touch your face,’ Iselin says. He cited supply chains where modern-day slavery exists, such as:
- your morning cup of tea or coffee
- the canned tomatoes in your pasta sauce
- your laptop and the car you drive
- your child’s t-shirt
- the gold in your watch
‘We are talking about hundreds of millions of men, women and children being exploited and abused every day in workplaces across the world,’ Iselin says. Human exploitation ranges from gender pay gaps and exploitation wages to human trafficking and slavery.