Recently read about the slavery situation in Mauritania and realized that it's not quite what it seems at first glance. Officially, it was abolished long ago—abolished in 1981 and criminalized in 2007. It would seem the problem is solved. But in practice? A completely different story.



You see, historically in Mauritania, a system developed where certain groups of people remained in hereditary dependence on others. And this isn’t just about forced labor—it's a whole social machinery where status is passed down through generations. A person is born into a dependent position, with no way out. Even now, the government publicly fights this, but human rights activists say the problem is far from solved.

And how does it work in reality? Often, it all starts with poverty. A family borrows food, money for treatment, livestock, or seeds from a wealthier person. The debt can be oral, with no paperwork, and conditions are vague. And here’s where it gets interesting—the owner sets the interest rates himself, decides what the debt is worth. The person tries to pay off the debt through labor, but due to constant additions for housing, food, and fines, the debt hardly decreases. Dependence lasts for years, sometimes even passing to children. If parents are tied to the owner’s family, their children work there from a young age. Officially, this is called tradition, but essentially, the person has no real way to leave.

Another mechanism is social attachment. The owner becomes the only source of work, protection, and connection to the outside world. The person is afraid to leave because they don’t know how to survive on their own, or they fear community pressure and stigma. It’s a psychological trap.

And here’s what’s interesting—people who find themselves in such dependence in Mauritania often don’t call it slavery. They say “it’s the way it’s always been” or “that’s how our parents lived.” If someone grew up in this system from childhood, they may perceive it as normal, not as a violation of rights. Even understanding legally that they are free, people are afraid to leave—where to live, how to earn money, who will support them? In rural areas, the owner can be the only source of everything.

Organizations like Anti-Slavery International note an interesting point—when people are given education, legal assistance, and real opportunities for independent earning, their perception changes. They start to call their past precisely coercion, not custom. The key is access to education, independent income, and support. Without this, the formal abolition of slavery does not mean real freedom. That’s the core of the problem in Mauritania—laws exist, but life remains the same.
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