As per the women and child development estimates, 3 million women in India
fall prey to traficking annually in the country and 40% of these are
minors. The country needs to face its moment of truth. India has been placed
on the US human trafficking tier 2 watchlist for not doing enough to curb
human smuggling.



"Whatever makes a man a slave takes half his worth away", Pope said. Indeed,
human trafficking is a modern day slavery where human beings are exploited
by treating them like commodities for profit. It is contrary to the
fundamental belief of all societies that people everywhere deserve to live
in safely and dignity. Victims of human trafficking who comprise of young
children, teenagers, men and women are subjected to involuntary servitude
and sexual slavery by force, fraud or coercion. Human smuggling, especially
of women and children has become a matter of serious national and
international concern. Sources confirm that nearly 800,000 victims are
annually trafficked across international borders worldwide and around
150,000 of them within and around the borders of South Asia alone. The fact
is that after drug dealing and illicit arms smuggling,  human trafficking is
the world's third largest organised crime, and growing by leaps and bounds.
Commercial exploitation of the vulnerable sections of the society has led to
massive growth of slave trade into a multimillion dollar business. According
to the FBI, this organised crime generates $9.5 billion in revenue each
year.



Unfortunately, India's record of prevention of trafficking in persons
remains abysmally poor. There can be no two opinions about the fact that the
problem has been under-estimated and ignored in our country. As per the
women and child development estimates, 3 million women in India fall prey to
traficking annually in the country and 40% of these are minors. It is
shameful that even as our leaders continue to bask in their election
victories, the US has placed India on the second worst category of human
trafficking watchlist. "India is a source, destination and transit country
for men, women and children trafficked for the purpose of forced labour and
commercial sexual exploitation", says the trafficking in in persons report
recently released by US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton.



Despite continuing to be the most favoured destination for human smuggling,
India has failed to improve its ranking again this year and has been placed
on tier II watchlist. The ranking implies that though the country is making
some efforts, it has failed to meet the minimum anti trafficking standards
and is therefore listed with 52 other countries that are under watch for
failing to tackle the problem.



The report further says that India is also a destination for women and girls
from Nepal and Bangladesh trafficked for the purpose of commercial sexual
exploitation. Every year 5000-7000 Nepales girls are trafficked into India
with the result that there are more than 250,000 Napalese girls and women in
Indian brothels. They become easy prey to people involved in human
trafficking as they are either sold by their parents or tricked into
fradulent marriages or worse still, promised employment in cities only to
find themselves in entertainment houses. Children from Nepal are also
trafficked into India for forced labour in circus shows. Men and women from
Bangladesh and Nepal are tracfficked through India for forced labour and
commercial sexual exploitation to Middle East. There are also victims of
labour trafficking among the thousands of Indians who migrate willingly
every year to the Middle East, Europe and the US to work as domestic
servants and low skilled labourers, the report says. Many a times these
workers become victims of exploitation as well as physical and sexual abuse
by their ruthless employers in the destination countries. Even in India
itself, women and girls are trafficked within the country for commercial
exloitation and forced marriage. Other purposes for human smuggling in India
include forced prostitution, marriage, domestic labour and bonded labour. In
India there are millions of children from poor families who are subjected to
forced labour by working in factories, as domestic servants, as beggars and
agricultural workers. They have even been used as trained combatants and
human bombs by some insurgent groups. Rich people in gulf countries also use
them in camel races. It must not be lost sight of that human trafficking is
not limited to sex trade alone but also for purposes like forced labour,
commercial gay and lesbian relationships, to hire wombs, domestic slavery,
organ transplantation and begging as well.



Inarguably, poverty is a crucial contributing factor for the rise in human
trafficking in India. At the heart of the problem also lies underdevelopment
and unemployment. It needs no reiteration that a vast majority of trafficked
women are from poor, landless families or belong to dalit, adivasi and low
caste communities. Girs from tribal areas and poor villages are most
vulnerable to trafficking in sex trade as the need for money is high for
their parents. This motivates them to sell their children for paltry sums
without even caring for their security. There is also a strong connection
between the problem of trafficking and the girl child who faces the higher
risk of being sold at birth, living as we are in a gender biased society.
For example, 40% of the children trafficked in India are from within the
country while 60% are from other countries. This is precisely the case with
Mandala, Sidhi, Reva, Katni and other tribal majority areas of Madhya
Pradesh where the number of cases pertaining to missing girls is on a high.
Though they are lured by lucrative job offers and promises of a better life,
the unfortunate reality is that they land in metros like Mumbai and Delhi
for being pushed into the sex trade. In some places, socio-cultural
practices also motivate women, girls and minors into such shameful acts. For
instance, the Northern districts of Karnataka such as Bijapur and Shimoga
encourage prostitution in the garb of religion by offering minor girls to
gods and godesses. Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and UP
are the high supply zones for women in prostitution. Bangalore is one of the
five major cities in India which together account for 80% of child
prostitution in the country.



Despite the magnitude of the problem of human trafficking, India has failed
to show evidence of increasing efforts to tackle the menace. Though the
government boasts of working for the uplift of these tribes and
underpreviledged people, it has not strucked at the root cause of
trafficking as the much touted development schemes are not reaching the poor
and backward classes. Even as India faces the prospect of being moved to
tier III blacklist next year, most states in the country are still not
combating the crime as a priority.



Though the government feels that efforts are being made to check human
trafficking, many problems like lack of punishment of traffickers and low
conviction rates seriously impede India's ability to effectively combat this
problem. Also, some of these criminals have political connections. The
complicity of some law enforcement agents with the Mafia who control the sex
industry makes it difficult to apprehend such criminals.



Notwithstanding the fact that Indian constitution prohibits human
trafficking and successive governments have formulated enough laws to check
the problem, we lack the will to enforce them. Consequently, these laws have
failed to act as a deterrent for those involved in trafficking. They know
that even if they are caught in the dragnet, they can escape easily as
prosecution will take years. Besides, efforts to protect the victims of
trafficking are inadequate and there is no agenda for their rehabilitation.
The law cannot address all of these. The society also cannot remain
callously indifferent to a problem that should worry us all. It also needs
to contribute its mite to ensure that such activities do not blossom and the
trafficking crisis is averted.



July 01, 2009 / CentralChronicle

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