Business leaders like to talk about business models. Big businesses, in particular, spend a lot of time and money tracking profit and loss, costs and incomes, across often uncountable business units around the world. Generally, twisting a business model into shape to maximise profits is considered the core of good business.
I have seen the eyes of bonded, enslaved and trafficked individuals too many times. The fear, the exhaustion, the sense of hopelessness. It’s a glimpse into a broken life.
These men, women and children are not units on a spreadsheet or mere numbers in a glossy business report. They are real human beings, with families, a childhood, aspirations, and memories.
Thailand is the regional capital of seafood processing and export. It is the world’s third largest seafood exporter and the world’s largest producer of tinned tuna. The Thai Department of Fisheries lists 82 seafood processors approved for export and this sector is served, on our estimation, by between 10,000 and 20,000 individual fishing vessels.
Such numbers are daunting. The size of the sector in Thailand translates to money and power, and tends to undermine attempts to advocate for better worker standards. But there is a darker side to the high-end business figures suggesting a thriving industry, represented by those tasked with manning these fishing vessels.
There are around 600,000 workers in this sector and around half of them, our research suggests, are migrant workers.
We believe 1 in 10 are slave workers, toiling at sea to put seafood on dinner plates all over the world, including, perhaps, on yours.
Those 5,000 workers whom we have helped escape seafood slavery represent just the beginning. And so, we can only conclude that the business model is surely broken.
It would be easy to call for a boycott. But this is not the solution. Many rely on jobs in the sector, and many workers without other employment options would then be cast further into the margins.
Secondly, we ask for support from donors to assist us in our work in freeing captured slaves and in helping them back into a normal life.
The New York Times is currently running a podcast which looks at the massive impact of slavery in American history. In it, the producers contend that the US economy was built by slavery.
We are at a point in our history in this part of the world where the next phase of our economic history is similarly being written through the filter of slavery.
It is incumbent on us all to be more aware of slavery in the seafood sector and to choose how we might ensure such practices do not define our future.
Patima Tungpuchayakul is co-founder of the Labour Protection Network, a Thai-based NGO which works to rescue and rehabilitate slave labourers in the fishing sector. She was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize in 2017