juin 14, 2025
Home » ‘Forced to work on cannabis farm for family debt’ – BBC News in Serbian

‘Forced to work on cannabis farm for family debt’ – BBC News in Serbian

‘Forced to work on cannabis farm for family debt’ – BBC News in Serbian


BBC
We are smuggled in the UK in the truck

The man from Vietnam says he is not sure he will ever recover from being smuggled in the UK in the truck and forced to work on the cannabis farm to repay family debts.

Our real name is not the right, it’s originating Ha Tinha.

He says he was beaten, forced to work at 7 pm every day and that he had no chance to escape.

But he is not lonely in that.

Almost a third of 3,602 Vietnamese migrants who arrived in the UK by boat last year were identified as potential modern slaves, although this number could jump after more victims would be discovered.

The government says that it will lean immigration regulations to cope with criminal gangs that blackmail people.

Due to the lack of lenders from trust, from which they can borrow money, people in Vietnam are often addressed by greeners charging high interest rates.

These greeners cooperate with gunners of smugglers, which force people to work against their will if their debts are not paid.

When his father became ill from lung cancer, his family borrowed money worth 220,000 euros from greenish.

Our sisters were both forced to go abroad to work and pay off the debt.

He was transferred to Russia with a fake passport, and then the villagers by Europe.

In France, she tells us that his smugglers forced him to enter the refrigerator, threatening him to kill him if he did not listen.

Cannabis

BBC
When the police revealed to us on the cannabis farm, had broken bones in the spine

He arrived at the UK over the Dover and was forced to clean houses without pay, before they sent it at the cannabis factory.

He says he recalls how often he thought, « I could die here and no one would know. »

In the end, the police found us, but the problems with physical and mental health were other.

« I don’t know when I’ll recover until the end, » he says.

A photograph of an unknown person who has a black jacket and a hood on his head

BBC
Van was not allowed to leave cannabis farm and began to get cold and had frequent nose bleeding as they kept it there

Out, whose identity we protect, another victim of human trafficking in the UK and was also forced to work at the cannabis farm.

He arrived in the UK legally as a student, but when he approached his visa, his family told him that he could not return to Vietnam because they had borrowed money from Green to pay for another two years to pay their debt.

« They threatened to beat me and threaten my family in Vietnam would not be able to live in peace, » he said.

Vana was later discovered by members of the border services while the gang was trying to smuggle in Ireland.

He says the beginning of him, he was a victim of human trafficking and was told that he would be deported back to Vietnam, at first he thought it was a good news.

« Then I realized that they were still in debt, gangsters will continue to find me in Vietnam, so they will continue to heal life to me and my family, » he said.

« At that moment, I was no longer living. »

The salvation army says that there is a risk that potential victims be « misidentified, criminalized and being denied access to » support they need.

Out and at the end they were referred to the National Mechanism for Referring – which is a process that finds support for people who were victims of modern slavery – and now receive support for charities in the UK.

‘Hidden alight all’

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that they have « unwavering determination » in the fight against modern slavery and was disturbed when he heard about Vanovo experience.

The Minister of Security of the lady’s boundaries Anđela Igl told the Southeast that the government must « put pressure on these organized gangs along the entire supply line from the very beginning. »

The government has also extended campaigns on social networks in Vietnam warning on « risks and realities » of illegal migration.

The Salvation Army says modern slavery « hides alightly all » and asks the public to pay attention to signs, such as workers who look scared, neglected, malnourished or have unused injuries.

The other signs are less obvious, as someone else pays travel costs for workers, speaks to their name, collects them and leaves in unusual times, or worker is not sure how it reads his address.

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