Christina McKelvie MSP joined parishioners and visitors at Cadzow Parish Church in Hamilton on Saturday (20 February) for a special concert to raise awareness and funds for the Stop the Traffik campaign against human trafficking.
The evening of song and musical performance was organised by Cadzow Church minister Rev John Carswell, who also played flute in the concert, and addressed by Central Scotland MSP Ms McKelvie. Dozens of appreciative concert-goers filled the church to enjoy the music and support the anti-trafficking cause.
Ms McKelvie told the audience that although awareness of human trafficking has increased in recent years, the problem has also got worse.
“We should never forget that this most vile form of exploitation is done to human beings by other human beings for their own and others’ material enrichment,” she continued.
“Human trafficking is a massive global issue. Between two and four million men, women and children are trafficked every year and the equivalent of one person a minute is trafficked across international borders…Trafficked people are not only ripped away from their homes and their families and forced into labour, sexual slavery and worse, they are also almost always subjected to physical and psychological abuse, threats and even torture.”
Ms McKelvie explained that human trafficking is not “just a problem on the other side of the world…It happens right here in Scotland, on our own doorsteps and under our noses.”
Ms McKelvie commended the SNP government for taking action against trafficking in Scotland. She concluded:
“The facts about trafficking are tough to hear and can seem overwhelming. But we’re not powerless and we all have the ability to make a stand against trafficking, however small.
“Talk to your family, friends, neighbours and colleagues, tell them about human trafficking – bore them daft about it – tell them what to look out for, how to recognise it when they see it and how to take action, and tell them to sign Stop the Traffik’s online declaration at www.stopthetraffik.org.
“Human trafficking doesn’t have to be inevitable – working together, we can Stop the Traffik.”




