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Stolen: I work with trafficked children

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Christine Beddoe Christine Beddoe | 08:46 UK time, Monday, 4 July 2011

For the past six years I have been the Director of - End Child Prostitution, Pornography and Trafficking. We are a leading children's rights organisation campaigning against child exploitation.

Over the years there has been a variety of films, TV programmes and books focusing on the issue of child trafficking and some have been more authentic than others.

When Stephen Butchard (writer) and (executive producer) from Open Door Productions first came to see me in early 2007, they showed immense patience and interest as we sat in a cafe around the corner from my office and talked for hours about the plight of children trafficked to the UK.

I knew then that Stolen would be a different production - one that captured the vulnerability of trafficked children, yet placed the child at the centre of the story, rather than the criminals that traffic them.

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Trafficked child Rosemary escapes from her safe house

That was followed up over the next year or so with many questions and answers and, to my pleasant surprise, the draft script was sent over for my comment on authenticity.

Such generosity is rare and it is indicative of the passion and commitment of the production team.

Stephen's script had encompassed most of the details that we had discussed earlier that there wasn't anything specific I wanted to change.

The script was so moving that I couldn't wait to see it on film.

When Sita later advised that would be the director of Stolen, I knew immediately that the children cast for the leading roles would be treated in the most sensitive way.

And to have play cop-with-a-heart DI Anthony Carter it was evident that this would be an intelligent and honest portrayal of child slavery in the UK today.

The plot follows three children trafficked into Britain - Rosemary from West Africa, Kim Pak from Vietnam and George from the Ukraine.

All their stories resonate strongly with ECPAT UK.

We hear about similar cases on a daily basis and we help the victims by holding the government to account, ensuring that it should do everything possible to protect the victims and prosecute the perpetrators.

Damian Lewis as DI Anthony Carter in Stolen.

Damian Lewis as DI Anthony Carter

As in Rosemary's case, children who are trafficked are often threatened by their traffickers, and groomed not to trust anyone else even, in this case, a well-intending DI Carter.

ECPAT UK believes every child suspected of being trafficked should have a 'guardian', one person they can trust, who would have responsibility to care for and support them, interpret seemingly incomprehensible behaviour and take decisions based on the child's best interest.

It's something that doesn't exist at the moment.

Police and other professionals who have not come into contact with child trafficking often don't understand how traffickers control their victims and how children are disciplined to respond with silence or with a series of well practised lies.

Rosemary's experience of is not unusual. She has had a curse put on her before leaving West Africa and believes horrific things will happen if she doesn't comply with her traffickers.

Witchcraft and ritual practices taken from their country of birth are widely used to control children, creating fear and terror.

Huy Pham as Kim Pak in Stolen

Huy Pham as Kim Pak

But these practices can seem unbelievable to the untrained professional and children's stories are often dismissed as not credible.

Kim Pak's story of being trafficked for forced labour to cultivate cannabis is a realistic portrayal of what has been identified by police research as one of the in child exploitation in the UK.

Vietnamese children make up the largest number of children trafficked to the UK, and yet are often themselves, their traffickers going free.

Stolen is set in an anonymous city, but without doubt child trafficking is a crime happening across the UK.

ECPAT UK research has found evidence of child victims from small villages in Wales to larger cities across the UK.

As comes across so well in the drama, child trafficking in the UK is a hidden crime so the child victims who are identified by police are only ever the tip of the iceberg.

Many more children are suffering in silence in ordinary streets and neighbourhoods.

This is why Stolen is such a landmark drama. Let's hope that all who watch it will be shocked at what they see and take action to support anti-trafficking work in the UK.

Our hope is that viewers will take more notice of the child they see doing more than the usual household chores next door, the child not in school, or the child begging on the street.

Child trafficking is slavery, there is no place for it in our society.

Christine Beddoe is director of ECPAT UK and a script advisor on Stolen.

Stolen is available to watch and download in Ö÷²¥´óÐã iPlayer until 10.29pm on Sunday, 10 July.

Comments made by writers on the Ö÷²¥´óÐã TV blog are their own opinions and not necessarily those of the Ö÷²¥´óÐã.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    I think that one has to remember the scene when the trafficer stated that he just supplies a demand. Very poingant I thought

  • Comment number 2.

    This matter is just too serious to be the subject of a drama which although no doubt based on fact is, at the end of the day, fiction. We have enough problems as it is in distinguishing between fact and fiction on television without blurring at the edges. This programme should have been a serious journalistic documentary. Yes, I know children who have been trafficked could not have been filmed, but there could have been reconstructions of actual cases and we would have known clearly what was fact and what was not. I think this programme was in danger of giving the impression that it was portraying an exaggeration of the truth like many "cops and robbers" dramas and that there was no need for society to be overly concerned. The actors portraying the nasty people just could not do a sufficiently convincing job and the investigating policeman was just too inept, involving his small daughter whilst his wife raised only minor protest. If you are going to bring such a subject to the TV screen, then don't dramatise it; just present the horrifying facts.

  • Comment number 3.

    This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.

  • Comment number 4.

    I'm really disappointed that such an important drama was on i-player for so little time. The programme created a real buzz and myself and many people I know found out about it days later through word of mouth, by which time it was no longer available. Are there any plans to repeat it?

  • Comment number 5.

    This was superb drama. It was extremely moving and thought-provoking - just the kind of drama at which the Ö÷²¥´óÐã excels. Please continue to make these important, emotional pieces.

  • Comment number 6.

    Hello all,
    Thanks for your comments. Cat #4, to answer your question - I've checked with the schedulers and I'm afraid at the moment there are no plans to repeat Stolen on Ö÷²¥´óÐã One. Programmes are usually available in iPlayer for seven days after they've been broadcast. There's more info on the , where you can ask a question.
    Thanks
    Fiona

  • Comment number 7.

    I'm the head of drama responsible for Stolen. It is great to hear all your views on this drama.

    jaze44 (#2) - your question about whether this could have made a better documentary is an interesting one and I think you're right to feel this subject worthy of a documentary, but I wouldn't agree that the subject is too serious to dramatise.

    The responsibility lies in the way you make the film and being sure that the fiction is a dramatisation of the truth. Everyone involved in this film took very seriously, the responsibility of bringing those children's stories to screen. That's shown by Stephen seeking Christine's expert guidance on the script. It is not always drama's job to highlight the wrongs in society, but there are times where we can bring issues to light.

    The issue of whether an audience can tell fact from fiction is again an interesting one and I would argue that an audience absolutely can. This was not presented as a cops and robbers drama, I would say the opposite was true, and would hope an audience were well aware we were fictionalising a truth, and that the film should leave you feeling that society should be concerned.

    Thanks to everyone who left a comment.

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