"They will find sweatshops abhorrent, slave labour a brutal, terrible thing to be happening in their neighbourhood, and the news that a 16-year-old has been knifed to death in London will shock them," he added. Britain has one of the highest rates of cocaine use in Europe, according to the European Commission and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) - with 4.2 per cent of young adults having taken the drug in 2015.
Cocaine 'worth €50m' discovered at Coca-Cola plant in France
Saggers said this was funding the exploitation of women in the sex industry, as well as slavery and gun violence. "The consequences of buying cocaine are more abhorrent than most of what the people using it find abhorrent," he said.
In Britain, there are an estimated 13,000 victims of forced labour, sexual exploitation and domestic servitude, most of them from Albania, Nigeria, Poland and Vietnam. Saggers said there was a lack of action among employers in tackling the prevalence and acceptance of cocaine use in some industries, particularly among banks and other companies in the City of London, Britain's financial centre.
Companies should address the problem through schemes that educate their staff about the impact of cocaine abuse on their health and wider society, he added. Tamara Barnett, projects leader at the Human Trafficking Foundation, said "we need to do all we can to emphasise the role the public can play in eradicating human trafficking."
Colombia seizes 6.1 tonne cocaine haul
"Highlighting the exploitation and abuse behind certain drug production could make some people think twice before they purchase drugs, or at least twice before boasting about doing something that has for too long been seen just as a fashionable lifestyle choice," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. In 2015 a report by the National Police Chiefs' Council found that commercial cultivation of cannabis was used to fund human trafficking.
COMMENTS
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ