You presume a lot of things, almost always entirely incorrectly.
Try fact based discussions and avoiding personal attacks, they might together help you stay on topic.
I’m not at all surprised.
We know from past reports of migrant worker abuse that powerful people are often in the background.
It doesn’t in and of itself make the migrant a ‘trafficked person’.
Oh, and there’s that visa again.
You’d need a very loose interpretation of that to apply it to this example given.
Even the individual and the organization helping her aren’t claiming she was trafficked.
There is no suggestion anywhere in the OP or the linked article that she and her family have been trafficked.
That was a contribution from your very own imagination.
Forgive me, I posted the link earlier in the thread, and have reposted above.
I have no expectation of anyone being a mind reader but I do expect, perhaps futilely so, that people engaged in a discussion would follow the discussion.
That’s alright, she’s got a visa.
No evidence of it being one of the ‘fake visas’ you referred to, and zero evidence of the ‘human trafficking’ you threw into the discussion.
Oh and the thread is the whole OP not the single bit you wish to misrepresent.
There is absolutely no indication in the report of visa status being anything to do with the example cases given or human trafficking, in fact the report makes it clear the woman in the example case had a visa.
But off you go, banging on about ‘sounds like people trafficking’ and fake visas.
Predictable!
So immigrants are not providing care in the UK care homes?
“Reports of modern slavery double in UK care sector”
Care sector
Clearly the single case discussed in the report is not the only case and very clearly the fact she works in one are of the care sector does not preclude all the rest of the care sector, refer Nottingham University report I linked above.
This makes interesting reading, 2019 so not something that suddenly shows up without any prior warnings:
https://www.nationalcareforum.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/MSEU-Briefing_Modern-slavery-risk-in-adult-social-care_FINAL.pdf
I suspect most people’s stories are not all true.
Are you doubting the existence of people subjected to treatment that meets the legal definition of slavery within the UK’s care industry?
A woman immigrant coming to the UK to take care of her own family and working to take care of people in the UK who’s own family can’t or won’t take care of them themselves is a long way off my idea of being a problem.