Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Assam girl befriended fake film director, trafficked and rescued
Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Concern over rise of trafficking cases
Saturday, August 9, 2014

Girl from Bihar, sold for Rs 30,000
Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Conflict and Bride Trafficking: The Sino-Burmese Border
This piece is by Laura Hackney, from Stanford STAND
With the end of the ceasefire in 2011 between the KIA (Kachin Independence Army) and the national Burmese army*, fighting in the Kachin State has escalated across the vast province. Though peace talks have taken place recently in the Chinese border town of Ruili, the effects of this violence have destroyed lives and endangered the livelihoods of thousands of Kachin people living in the region. Additionally, the Palaung people in the Northeast Shan State of Burma have also suffered decades of fighting, increased food, education, and healthcare costs, as well as military seizures of land. The vulnerabilities of these minority groups (especially women) have intensified despite the political reforms coming from Naypyidaw.Due to these various compounding factors, these states along the Sino-Burmese border have become a perfect breeding ground for the trafficking of women and girls into China’s Yunnan Province. Over the past 15 years, migration to China has increased as economic opportunities in towns such as Ruili have exploded. Once thought of as the “Wild West” of China, these border towns were the centers for the sex industry, drug trafficking, gambling, and a lucrative jade market. The local government has swiftly cracked down on these illicit activities (especially in Ruili) in the recent decade. However, there has emerged another lucrative market in the region, namely—women trafficked to become brides for Chinese men.As with several other rapidly developing nations, China has experienced extraordinary demographic changes in the past three decades. In addition to an aging population, there exists in China an aggregate gender imbalance. This imbalance exists in various regional contexts, and has had its most extreme manifestations in rural areas. Due to land reform, the One Child Policy, the proliferation of ultra-sounds, and the overwhelming dependence on son to carry on the family name, the sex ratio at birth in some regions is greatly skewed (in some areas the imbalance is as high as 130 males per every 100 females). Traditional means of securing a bride is no longer available for some men, particularly those living in poor villages. Ruili’s location on the border between Yunnan and Burma acts as a gateway for women to be trafficked into Yunnan and then out to different provinces across the country.Two Burmese NGOs, the Palaung Women’s Association and the Kachin Women’s Association, have been working in Thailand to document these cases of human trafficking. As with a large number of trafficking cases, traffickers are able to take advantage of the relative poverty of those victims who they wish to sell. Many young women living in the Palaung and Kachin areas of Burma are told that they will be able to find good jobs in prosperous China and send money home to their families. These women enter China, often without documentation, and are sold to Chinese families who need a wife and heir. Once in China, these women do not have access to many public services, can suffer abuse at the hands of their new husbands, or be forced to work without wages in various industries.Both the Burmese and Chinese governments have established National Plans of Action against Trafficking of Women and Children; however, the root causes of this problem, especially in Burma, have yet to be addressed. The causes of trafficking can be complex, incorporating gender relations, conflict environments, economic resource allocation, globalization, proliferation of crime networks, and poverty--to name a few. In this light, human trafficking is an intolerable symptomatic of various forms of oppression. As a starting point, there must be awareness that a main factor pushing these women in the hands of traffickers is the lack of opportunities in their home cities or villages. An end to the fighting in the Kachin State and a focus on more equitable economic investment by foreign, private, and government entities should be the priority for those working for positive change in Burma.
*Note: “Burmese” here does not explicitly mean the Burmese ethnic group.
Thursday, December 26, 2013

Four teenage girls forced into prostitution rescued from Meerut red light area
Four teenage girls, including two Nepal nationals, who were forced into prostitution were rescued from a red light area in Kabadi Bazaar in Meerut. Based on a tipoff, the Anti Human Trafficking Unit (AHTU) of the Meerut police at night raided a house from where a sex racket was being run by a woman named Sumitra and rescued the four girls, The girls are aged between 16 and 17 and two of them are Nepali nationals while the other two are from Jaipur, Sumitra managed to escape and a hunt is on for her, One Rajkumar, also from Nepal, was taken into custody and is being questioned by police.
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Thursday, July 11, 2013

Girl rescued, A trafficking ring busted in Dehradun
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Saturday, June 22, 2013

Minor girls rescued by community intervention in pithoragarh
Thursday, May 30, 2013

Court notice to police over rescued sex worker
The Delhi High Court Wednesday took a suo moto cognizance of a media report on the failure of police for not registering an FIR on the charge of gang-rape after a teenaged girl was rescued from a brothel and issued notice to the government and police.
A division bench of Chief Justice D. Murugesan and Justice Jayant Nath sought the reply of police and the city government by July 10. The magistrate before whom the girl was presented May 11 had filed a plea in the court.
After reading a news report of a national daily which said that police had even allowed alleged culprits, abductors and brothel owners to intimidate the victim during her court presence, the court sought the magistrate's report.
"Girls who are rescued from the brothel could not reveal the truth to the court as they (brothel owners, abductors) were present in the court...In this case they even threatened the girl sitting in the court room to bring her back into the business," the bench said and appointed advocate Zubeda Begam to assist it in the case.
"Police even did not file the FIR (first information report) on the charge of the gang-rape...We want guidelines in this regards...," said the bench, which sought a report from the magistrate before whom the girl was presented.
As per the media report, a 19-year-old girl was rescued May 9 by police from a brothel at G.B. Road in central Delhi and police did not deem it fit to register a gang-rape case.
"Rather, it allowed her rapists, abductors and brothel owners to intimidate her during her court presence. And while her father has come from South 24 Parganas district of West Bengal to take his youngest daughter back, she was sent to Nari Niketan instead," the report said.
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Friday, April 19, 2013

Cops rescue trafficked Malda girl
MALDA: A 16-year-old girl who had gone missingsince April 6 was rescued from a hideout in Maldaon Wednesday night. The teen had earlier been trafficked to Delhi reportedly by two of her distant relatives. While one of the traffickers was arrested, police are yet to nab the victim's kin.
On April 6, the girl went missing from her house in village Rajnagar following which her father, a daily wage earner, lodged a police complaint the next day. In his complaint, the victim's father alleged that one of his distant relatives and his wife Kakali - had taken advantage of the family's poverty-stricken condition and forcibly taken the girl to Delhi to get her married to a wealthy man. Police had then registered a missing diary.
Four days back, the victim called up her mother and said she had been sold at a red light area in Delhi and forced into the flesh trade. The girl said she was using a client's phone to call and reportedly begged her parents to rescue her.
On being informed by the victim's parents, police initiated a probe and rescued the girl from a hideout at Milki..
SP Kalyan Mukherjee said the accused and the victim were produced in court on Thursday. "We have produced both the rescued girl and Mithu at court today and taken them in police custody. We are yet to arrest the duo. A search is on to nab them."
Meanwhile, three school girls - aged between 14 and 17 years - who had gone missing on April 16 at Mahadipur in the English Bazar police station area were rescued from Lucknow railway station by railway police on Wednesday night. The SP that Malda police are on their way to Lucknow to bring back the girls.
A minor girl of Malda was rescued from Delhi red light area. One of the traffickers was arrested. The girl was missing since 6th April and was trafficked in the name of marriage. Police are looking for two more of the traffickers.
It is learnt that 16 year old Sipra Choudhury (name changed) was missing since 6th of this month from her house of village Rajnagar under Kaliachak police station. Her father , daily labourer Basu Choudhury lodged a complaint to police next day. He alleged that his distant relative Pankaj Choudhury and his wife Kakali had taken Sipra with them to Delhi.
Sipra was the fourth of the seven children of the poor family. Taking the chance of their abject poverty Sipra was lured to marry a wealthy groom and was taken to Delhi without the consent of her parents. Police recorded a missing diary.
Four days back, Sipra called her mother Chanchala and claimed that she had been sold in a red light area of Delhi. She was forced to involve in the trade. She took the chance of a calling with the phone of a client. Mother claimed that Sipra begged to be rescued. Getting this phone her parents again visited Kaliachak police station. Police began an enquiry.
Police came to know that Pankaj and Kakali had sold Sipra to one Mithu Rajak of trafficking net who later took the girl to Delhi. Pressure from police finally led Mithu to take the girl back to Malda. She was kept in a hideout at Milki under English Bazaar Police Station and police raided the den last night to rescue the girl. Mithu too was arrested.
Police Super Kalyan Mukherjee said, "We have produced both the rescued girl and Mithu to court today and taken them in police custody. However, we could not arrest Pankaj and Kakali yet. Search is on."
Meanwhile, three school girls ---all between 14 to 17 years---were missing from 16th April at Mahadipur under English Bazaar Police station. Fursed Sk, Sera Sk and Rafajul Sk, the guardians of these girls lodged complaint to police separately. Police had informed all the railway stations. Finally they were rescused from Lucknow station by railway police on 17th April night. SP said that Malda police are on way to Lucknow to bring back the girls. TOI
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Saturday, September 15, 2012

25 girls trafficked to Delhi rescued
Many Government agencies, police, NGOs are coordinating efforts to rescue trafficked girls and also to ensure no girl falls in the trap of the traffickers.
In one such example of coordinated efforts, the Jharkhand Police, Delhi Police, Bharatiya Kisaan Sangh and Action against Trafficking and Sexual Exploitation of Children (ATSEC) rescued 25 girls — all aged between 12 years to 17 years — from Delhi and brought them in the State capital on September 9.
Since April, 53 girls had been rescued. Simdega, Gumla, Sahebganj, Latehar, West Singhbhum are among the districts deeply troubled by trafficking. An FIR was logged against four traffickers in Jharkhand and one trafficker in Delhi. Four of them are in jail in the connection.
The Department of Child Welfare tried to contact the parents of rescued children. Till Tuesday four parents had arrived to receive their children. Child and Social Welfare Department Minister Bimla Pradhan said that 17 children would be given admission in Kasturba Gandhi School and rest others would be given livelihood training. Minister also gave school bags to girls.
She opined that the problem of trafficking could be handled effectively if local bodies like Panchayati Raj Institution (PRI) are strengthened.
“PRI should keep a detailed record of every person going out of the state. They must have information like permanent address and the address of the place where people are going,” she said.
Friday, August 10, 2012

Many rescued yet dozens of minor traceless since 2010
Sl. No | Rescued children & time | Origins | Trafficked area & Rescue team | Remark |
---|---|---|---|---|
a) | 93 kids Jan, 2010 | Manipur | Rescued from a house in Sholinganallur by CWC Tirunelveli district, Tamil Nadu, 3 children were reportedly hidden in a cupboard | 1 girl was sexually assaulted. Police arrested 2 people from Manipur who brought the children to Chennai. The arrested persons were identified as Rakesh and Herojit. |
b) | 76 kids Jan 2010 | Manipur & Assam | Rescued by CWC Kanyakumari, Tamil Nadu. The children were kept in an unregistered Orphanage called Bedesta Blessing Home located at Kanyakumari. 53 from Manipur 23 from Assam. | Arun Ram from Time of India reports that, "the rescue of 76 malnourished children, from Manipur and Assam, from a home at Kuzhithurai in Kanyakumari district this week is only the tip of a vast network, which receives crores of rupees from churches and agencies abroad by showing a large number of children under their care" |
c) | 3 kids Feb. 2010 | Manipur Lamkang tribe of Chandel | Rescued by combine team of CWC Tamil Nadu and CWC Manipur. | Rescued from Tamil Nadu |
d) | 10 kids Mar. 2010 | Manpur CCpur | Intercepted by Sekmai police while traveling in an inter-state bus heading for Guwahati. According to police 9 children held from CCpur & 1 from Mizoram. | The 10 trafficked children have been handed over to the Child Line of Social Welfare department-Manipur, by Sekmai Police 3 of them were girls |
e) | 27 kids Apr. 2010 | Manipur 21 from Chandel district, 4 from CCpur 2 from Senapati | Rescued and brought back to Imphal from Chennai. Tamil Nadu Government rescued the 27 children from different unregistered children Homes based in Chennai and Kanyakumari | The children were between 9 to 15 years 9 of them were girls. |
f) | 1 + 3 kids Sep. 2010 | Imphal West & Imphal East | 1 rescued from a hotel in Paona Bazar. 3 rescued from ImphalAirport by Singjamei police | - |
g) | 11 girls above 18 yrs Oct. 2010 | 6 girls held from Nagaland while the rest from Mizoram | Goa police rescued them from a beauty parlour | The girls alleged that the owner tried to force them into the flesh trade |
A child undergoing trauma for a long period during childhood, the time when they absorb knowledge to their unpainted canvas like the water to dry cottons absorb hardness in life and becomes numb. The natural spontaneity of creative thoughts and ideas to a child were side-lined by sufferings which is unproductive but has choking effects and the desire for freedom with no means and might to a helpless child becomes the only hope.
Rehabilitation with proper education, nutrition and care was the immediate thoughts among many people and CBOs when the trafficked children were brought to the State. Stigma and discrimination the children and their parents might face from the locality or people known to them are another big issue. There was a commitment call from the CWC in proper rehabilitation of the rescued children.
Tamenglong CBOs and student bodies organised a grand reception of the 52 rescued Zeliangrong Sudents from Tamenglong along with their parents and announced that they will punish any person who help in trafficking children from the region (2010).
All Manipur Christian Organization (AMCO) and El Shaddai, an NGO conducted a consultation meet on child trafficking. One hundred pastors from across the State took part. President of AMCO Rev Prim Vaiphei expressed that some self-styled Church functionaries are involved in human trafficking cases.
Following reports of rescuing 76 children from Assam and Manipur, being rescued from "homes" run by missionaries in Tamil Nadu, the Supreme Court in the first week of April ordered a probe into a possible trafficking racket involving tribal children. On September 1st the Supreme Court passed an order that imposes a ban on sending out children below the age of 12 years or those in primary schools to other states to pursue education.
The main factor behind parents sending off their ward to other state is for better education at free of cost as promised by the traffickers who are mostly missionaries. Arun Ram from Time of India reports that, "the rescue of 76 mal-nourished children, from Manipur and Assam, from a home at Kuzhithurai in Kanyakumari district this week is only the tip of a vast network, which receives crores of rupees from churches and agencies abroad by showing a large number of children under their care".
The Court also directed Ministry of DoNER looking after the development affairs of the north east region to assess requirement in terms of educational infrastructure such as construction of school buildings, hostels and children's homes in consultations with the states of Assam, Nagaland, Manipur, Arunachal Pradesh and Meghalaya and submit a report to the Ministry of Human Resources Development for support.
Some few organisations who have been working in prevention of trafficking in the north east region are GOLD, EKTA, SOS Children Village and Snehalaya of Guwahati. Impulse NGO Shillong, Public monitoring committee, Tamenglong district, Fenry Reamei, Tamenglong based NGO, and Coalition on Children's Right to Protection, Manipur, Child Line and other government agencies and local bodies of the North Eastern States.
North East Support Centre and Helpline together with Pratigya - Anti-Human Trafficking Initiative of Operation Mercy India Foundation and other human rights agencies dealing with human trafficking took up certain initiatives in their efforts in combat the menace.
The kind of work these private organisations and volunteers had contributed are putting alerts on movement of large number of children in the railway Stations, awareness campaigns on trafficking, and organisation like Guwahati based GOLD trains volunteers on how to identify the traffickers. Besides Indian Red Cross Society took up their own methods in combating child trafficking.
The National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) did a commendable work in studying the ground realities of the trafficking cases and the Supreme court entrusted them for the same mission after which the verdict on imposition of banning children who are 12 years and below inpursuingstudy outside their respective States of North East India was passed.
The Commission also convene meetings of the North-Eastern States and the destination States in working out a coordination plan for State to State mechanisms. G Satyabati, Director of Social Welfare Department officially announced that Anganwadi workers will be roped in a door to door survey to identify trafficked children who are yet to be rescued in the year 2010 but so far there has been no reports from the same department nor Anganwadi workers are seen surveying houses for the same cause.
A reliable source says that there are still thousands of children from Manipur trapped in illegal homes operating in the Country. The source also disclosed that he has seen them with his own eyes.
"One girl who stayed together with us was called by the 'pastor' to his room every night and bolted the room from inside and we, boys were asked to massage the pastor's son named Beni and one Gita. The girl called by the pastor regularly had left the home earlier", Bungo narrated.
Although the kids gave indications of sexual harassment, officials of Social Welfare Department maintained that no sign of sexual abuse could be observed during medical examination.
"They did many things irritating to the body", said Bem who is about 13 years old - newspapers quoted.
Unscrupulous elements are taking advantage of under-privileged families by exploiting their children with the pretext of good was the remark made by Phillips Naoroibam Secretary of All Manipur Working Journalists Association in a consultation programme on Child Trafficking in Manipur 2010. In the follow up incidents remarkably Bishenpur Police arrested two persons allegedly involved in the trafficking of child and the charge-sheet for trial in the court was also submitted by the investigating officer.
In the aftermath of the rescue operations in 2010 the central home ministry opened up two units of anti-human trafficking units under police department as part of police modernisation process under the initiative of central governments'. The two units are functioning under two district police departments.
On Jul 11, 2012 Nagaland Post reported 'two girls were rescued from being trafficked to Singapore at Imphal Airport. Anti-Human Trafficking Unit of Manipur (AHTUM) police have rescued the two minor girls, aged around 16 years. Police also nabbed the accused identified as A. John Maheo (52) son of Ashuli of Kaibi village of Senapati district presently residing at Imphal's Dewlahland area.
Police sources detailed that AHTUM led by sub-inspector Y Kheda detected and detained the two girls at Imphal Airport when they were about to board a flight. During an enquiry, the team came to know that the two girls were taken to Dewlahand, before taking to Imphal Airport for onward transportation to Singapore.
Sources confirmed that Maheo through a Singapore based agency, Charisha Employment Agency, lured the girls on the pretext of providing jobs in Singapore. The girls would have been forced into immoral activities, the sources added.
For the protection of child Juvenile Justice Boards are being set up across the nine districts of Manipur in the last 2 years. Enactment of the Juvenile Justice Act is made. The Child Welfare Committees and boards are effectively dealing with the rehabilitation of children who had fallen victims to trafficking. Training on Juvenile Justice Act and Acts related with child trafficking and prevention for police officers of different ranks in collaboration with the social welfare department were held rigorously which remains effective.
Over and above State level anti-trafficking squad were formed under Social Welfare Department to combat the trafficking menace. But it is not known to the public as who comprised the squad and where they are operating now and the outcomes so far.
However grass root level awareness like imparting basic knowledge on trafficking to ignorant citizens in the far flung areas was missing like 'the trafficked kids. The main area of prevention was void in the programmes. The awareness level is not up to the mark in this area. The tributaries of flowing knowledge on trafficking have not reached the high hills and the plain ends. Knowledge on hazards of trafficking to curb it from a vulnerable state like Manipur should be imparted at the nearest time. Else the count by the profiting criminals as to how many child births took place in the State will go on.
The void resulted to new trafficking toll as evident from the recent report of pending rescue bid by State Machineries as the destine State failed to handle couple of trafficked children who are below 12 years of age' that appeared in local dailies few days back. The report also says that they were trafficked last year. The situation arises even after Supreme Court passes its extraordinary order of banning NE children 12 years and below in pursuing studies in other States for education in 2010.
President of All Manipur Christian Organization Rev Prim Vaiphei had already expressed that some self-styled Church functionaries are involved in human trafficking cases. The role of AMCO in spreading message on trafficking and its venomous aftermath to the vulnerable parents and guardians of the State would be effective. There could be PPP model of fighting the trafficking menace. Else rescue bid would be the only means other than the effective preventive measures of stopping the concerns in sending off the minor students from their care.
Meetings, seminars and knowledge sharing among intellectuals, lawyers, Child Rights organisations, NGOs etc. were witnessed in the last few years. But the same medium of empowerment and skill impartment is seldom heard of at the village and local authority levels. For the light of the law to shine candles need to be lit up however challenging the corners are to visualise.
AIR and DDK are two effective media machinery of Government which can impart time to time knowledge through talk show and other awareness products like ads to nook and corner of the State besides other media houses who had been active in reports about trafficking and related news. Comprehensive knowledge about trafficking and its consequences remains a big tool in preventing parents and guardians from handing over their wards to wrong hands.
Coming to women trafficking, the State along with her north eastern neighbours is still vulnerable.
DSP of Goa Police, Mohan Naik says "Just a few days before the beauty parlour incident, some girls from Manipur were rescued and repatriated" - newspapers quoted. 11 girls were rescued from a beauty parlour in Goa in Oct. 2010. The girls alleged that the owner tried to force them into flesh trade. 6 girls held from Nagaland while the rest from Mizoram. The girls from Mizoram have been repatriated a team of Nagaland police proceed to Goa in connection with the case.
Meghalaya has already held a high level Governmental talks on the measures needed to check frauds and cheats, who lure girls under false promises of providing them respectable jobs and then force them into the prostitution ring.
A total of 179 girls who were trafficked into Goa for commercial sexual exploitation were rescued in the state over the last three years reports Nagaland Post via news agencies ( 27 June 2012)
Out of them 146 were Indian girls followed by Nepal (27), Bangladesh (4) and Russia (2). From Indian states, 39 girls came from Mumbai. Others were Manipur (31), Goa (16), Andhra Pradesh (14), West Bengal (9), Nagaland (8), Karnataka (7), Maharashtra and Assam (both 5 each), Mizoram (4), Times of India report stated.
The revelation came from Anyay Rahit Zindagi (ARZ) Goa. ARZ is a nodal NGO working to curb human trafficking for commercial sexual exploitation in Goa. Arun Pandey Director of ARZ said that no study has been done on the magnitude of trafficking despite Goa being a destination State for trafficked girls.
As a preventive measure an official team from Manipur including Satyabati, Director, Social Welfare Department, Ng, Nongyai former Human Rights member, and concerned officials stayed in Delhi during the Common Wealth Games in Delhi and paid visits to the work place of the girls from the State. They interacted with NGOs working for the welfare of the North Eastern girls, and students' organization of other states, civil society organizations, and government officials.
Another Kohima based social organization feels that the government should provide more job avenues such as the setting of Mahila IRB Battalion which has bought laurels to the State during their stint at the CW games. The organisation hinted that creating job avenues in the State will help in women falling victim to traffickers who lure them.
Rehabilitation of the trafficked adolescent girls who were forced into sex work remains tough as self-stigma is high. They are prone to suicidal tendencies says a psychologist. Often vulnerable to the epidemic HIV when they are forced into the odd profession. Psychosis a common psychological ailment remains a major haunt which need special treatment for total recovery was the comment from a Reknown Psychologist of Manipur when I interacted on the issue.
To be continued.....
(extracts of newspapers can be had from the writer)
Author is Imphal Correspondent of Kakching based IMAGE TV and can be contacted at jameslaphoi(at)gmail(dot)com
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