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Combating Trafficking (Focus on the Girl Child). Dimensions, Challenges, Existing Responses (Jharkhand - Experience & Initiatives). Definition of Trafficking. “Trafficking in persons” shall mean the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons,
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Combating Trafficking(Focus on the Girl Child) Dimensions, Challenges, Existing Responses (Jharkhand - Experience & Initiatives)
Definition of Trafficking “Trafficking in persons” shall mean • the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons, • by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person, • for the purpose of exploitation. Exploitation shall include, at a minimum, the exploitation of the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of organs; • The consent of a victim of trafficking in persons shall be irrelevant where any of the means above have been used; • The recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of a child for the purpose of exploitation shall be considered “trafficking in persons” even if this does not involve any of the means set forth above.
Most sinister part of trafficking • Purpose - mostly CSE • Jharkhand Tribal girls exploited for domestic labour in big cities • Delhi itself has almost 300 so called agencies for such recruitments • Conservative estimates - 3 lakh girls/women as domestic labour/maids in Delhi/NCR
Many teenaged girls employed as domestic labour/ maids- subjected to sexual harassment/ exploitation. • Cases mostly unreported/unregistered • Most of the cases reported registered only after • a media outcry or • intervention of social workers/ NGOs. • Few instances of law enforcement/govt agencies suo-moto registering complaints.
Rescue, Rehabilitation & Reintegration of Trafficked Girls/Women PROBLEMS
Pannalal • Arrested from Delhi for running Human Trafficking racket in/from Jharkhand • Symptomatic of the problem in Jharkhand • Owns multiple agencies • Has recruited thousands of girls over the years • Is upwardly mobile- in touch with politicians, corporatorsetc • Pointer to an Eco-system of trafficking where legitimate and illegitimate merge almost imperceptibly • Many such ‘Pannalals’ operating across Jharkhand – only scales of operations vary
Poor children including hundreds of girls (some even 5 years old) moved from Godda district in Jharkhand to Kerala orphanages ostensibly for better education • In the same district already more than 50 madarsas exist for minority children • Children transferred after creating false documents- birth and so called destitution certificates • Aadhar card created at Kerala • No guarantee of their ultimate fate
Lessons Learnt Prevention Reintegration and Protection from Re-victimization Rescue Demand Source
Supply Factors • Abject poverty • Social Mores - Child marriage, Single/widowed, and abandoned women not accepted in rural communities • Female illiteracy and lack of access to education by girls • Male unemployment and loss of family income puts pressure on women to earn • Natural and manmade calamities and poor rehabilitation puts pressure on women and children to earn • Dysfunctional families that have difficulty functioning and communicating, especially on emotive issues • Desertion by one or the other parent, uncared/abandoned kids. • Traditional practices give social legitimacy to trafficking. These include the Devadasiand Jogintraditions and traditional prostitution in some communities.
Demand Factors • Nuclear Families - lowering of family support – live in maids. • Increased Urbanization plus increasingly both spouses working. • Declining sex ratio – demand for wives in NW States “Paros” • Rising male migration to urban areas and demand for commercial sex. • Growth of tourism, which indirectly encourages sex tourism.
P R E V E N T I O N • Coordination • Awareness Education Dept. Social welfare Rural Dev. Dept. NGOs & CIVIL SOCIETY GROUPS Labour Dept. Information & Broadcasting (PRD) • Regulation • Registration • Enrollment • Employment • Skilling Schemes • Awareness • Media • Plays etc
Rescuing immediately • Speedy investigation • Protect from Prosecution R E S C U E Police Prosecution • Legal help • Coordination • Financial aspect • Transit homes/Shelter • homes Social welfare Health Dept. • Treatment • Counselling • Counselling • Liaision NGO’s Nodal officer for each dept.
R E I N T E G R A T I O N R E H A B I L I T A T I O N Education Dept. • Enrollment Social Welfare Labour & Training dept. NGO’s • Shelter homes • Scholarships • Rehabilitation package • Employment • Vocational Training • Reintegration • Social Ostracisation
CONVERGENCE OF STAKEHOLDERS ESSENTIAL • NGOs • SOCIAL WELFARE • POLICE • SHELTER HOMES • LABOUR DEPT • EDUCATION • RURAL DEVT. • PROSECUTORS • INFORMATION & BROADCASTING
InstitutionalInitiatives • AHTUs - 8 Anti - Human Trafficking Units set up in vulnerable Districts • Training & Sensitization – SustainedMulti-stakeholder training • Helpline nos. – Resource Centre Helpline, Child protection Helpline numbers widely advertised • Safe migration – LabourDeptt. registrations • Awareness Generation – Campaign across the State • MahilaVikasBal • Panel of Counselors • SOPs for all Deptts - Implemented on ground • State Resource Centre – Representation of all Deptts • Resource Centre in Delhi – Coordinate in Delhi/NCR • State Executive Committee- Involvement of all stakeholders under leadership of Chief Secretary.