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Bank account checks and modern slavery Bank account checks and modern slavery
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Sun 24 Sep 2017 17.44 BST
Last modified on Mon 27 Nov 2017 16.31 GMT
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The prime minister happily invokes the history of transatlantic slavery when it comes to the measures she is implementing against what she calls “modern slavery”. But her ambition to create a “hostile environment” for irregular migrants (UK banks to check 70m bank accounts in search for illegal immigrants, 21 September) evokes rather different historical comparisons.The prime minister happily invokes the history of transatlantic slavery when it comes to the measures she is implementing against what she calls “modern slavery”. But her ambition to create a “hostile environment” for irregular migrants (UK banks to check 70m bank accounts in search for illegal immigrants, 21 September) evokes rather different historical comparisons.
The constitutions drawn up by “free” northern states in America such as Ohio and Illinois in the early 19th century, for example, may have prevented slavery, but their white architects were at pains to discourage fugitive slaves from southern states from seeking refuge there. They crafted legislation requiring black people with free status to register with their county of residence and carry proof of freedom. Residents who harboured runaway slaves were criminalised, and to assist southern slave owners seeking to recapture runaway slaves, there were laws mandating employers and schools to verify certificates of freedom of all persons racialised as black. Had it been the norm for people to have bank accounts, banks would doubtlessly have been required to police their customers.The constitutions drawn up by “free” northern states in America such as Ohio and Illinois in the early 19th century, for example, may have prevented slavery, but their white architects were at pains to discourage fugitive slaves from southern states from seeking refuge there. They crafted legislation requiring black people with free status to register with their county of residence and carry proof of freedom. Residents who harboured runaway slaves were criminalised, and to assist southern slave owners seeking to recapture runaway slaves, there were laws mandating employers and schools to verify certificates of freedom of all persons racialised as black. Had it been the norm for people to have bank accounts, banks would doubtlessly have been required to police their customers.
The kind of freedom that is being protected in the UK today is no more universal or morally admirable than this was historically. Worse still, the planned checks on bank accounts will force many irregular migrants into deeper dependency on employers and others. They will be left more, not less, vulnerable to the “horrific abuses” that Mrs May claims to find so intolerable.Prof Julia O’Connell DavidsonUniversity of BristolThe kind of freedom that is being protected in the UK today is no more universal or morally admirable than this was historically. Worse still, the planned checks on bank accounts will force many irregular migrants into deeper dependency on employers and others. They will be left more, not less, vulnerable to the “horrific abuses” that Mrs May claims to find so intolerable.Prof Julia O’Connell DavidsonUniversity of Bristol
• Would that the government treated individuals of high net worth and companies using tax havens with the same rigour.Cllr Vaughan ThomasNorwich city council• Would that the government treated individuals of high net worth and companies using tax havens with the same rigour.Cllr Vaughan ThomasNorwich city council
Immigration and asylumImmigration and asylum
MigrationMigration
Banks and building societiesBanks and building societies
SlaverySlavery
Theresa MayTheresa May
BankingBanking
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