LONDON—THREE women have been freed after spending 30 years held
captive in a south London home, police announced Thursday, including one woman
believed to have spent her entire life as a virtual slave.
London's Metropolitan Police announced the rescues after two
people — a man and a woman, both 67 — were arrested early Thursday as part of
an investigation into slavery and domestic servitude.Journalists
The investigation was launched after one of the captive women
contacted a charity, which then went to the police. Those freed “some weeks
ago” are a 69-year-old Malaysian woman, a 57-year-old Irish woman and a
30-year-old British woman.
Police said they do not believe the victims are related and said
there was no evidence of sexual abuse. While it is unclear if the 30-year-old
was born in the south London house, she appears to have been held in domestic
servitude for her entire life, the force said.
Kevin Hyland, head of the force's human trafficking unit, said all
three were “deeply traumatized” and have been in the care of a charity equipped
to deal with severe trauma since they were freed.
The nationalities of those arrested were not immediately disclosed.
“When we had established the facts, we conducted the arrests,”
Hyland told reporters.
He said police were contacted in October by Freedom Charity, a
group that raises awareness about child abuse, forced marriages and honour
killings. It told the force it had received a call from a woman who said she
had been held against her will at a London address for more than 30 years.
The catalyst for the woman's call was a television documentary on
forced marriages, according to police.
Police said an investigation discovered the south London house in
Lambeth and, with the help of Freedom Charity, the women were rescued.
“Their lives were greatly controlled,” Hyland said. “For much of
it, they would have been kept on the premises.”
He said his unit — which deals with many cases of servitude and
forced labour — had seen cases of people held for up to ten years “but we've
never seen anything of this magnitude before.”
Aneeta Prem, founder of Freedom Charity, described the situation
as one of domestic servitude.
“They
were basically treated as slaves,” she told the BBC.
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