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Antitrafficking Project Aasara
Three held on charge of human trafficking
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THE HINDUDate:30/06/2008 Andhra Pradesh - Kadapa Three held on charge of human traffickingSpecial Correspondent KADAPA: Rayachoti police arrested Pasupuleti Veera Nagaiah, Jeelani and Mahaboob Basha and remanded them on charges of resorting to human trafficking, Kadapa Superintendent of Police Mahesh M. Bhagwat said on Sunday. The police are making efforts to apprehend Nazeer, who was allegedly involved in trafficking of women to Kuwait in the past. A 40-year-old woman victim (whose name the police withheld) of Gorlamudivedu village in Rayachoty had approached Pasupuleti Veera Nagaiah collected Rs. 40,000 from her promising to send her to Kuwait as a maid servant. He sent her to Kuwait through an unauthorised agent Jeelani of Rayachoty and his brother Mahaboob Basha, the SP told a press conference. In Kuwait, Nazeer, another brother of Jeelani, sold the victim to a brothel house, where she was confined for 10 days along with some other women, he stated. The victim managed to escape through a bathroom window of the brothel house and approached the police station and were jailed as they did not possess relevant documents, he said. Complaint lodged The victim and another woman of Rayachoti and three women of West Godavari contacted the Indian Embassy and they were sent back to India, Mr. Bhagwat stated. The victim lodged a complaint and on its basis, Rayachoti Urban police registered a case under section 420 IPC, section 24 (1) AP Immigration Act, sections 3, 4 and 5 of Prevention of Immoral Trafficking Act against Jeelani, Pasupuleti Veera Nagaiah, Mahaboob Basha of Rayachoty and Nazeer, resident of Kuwait, the SP said. He appealed to people not to approach unauthorised agents. People aspiring to go abroad should obtain insurance from Pravasa Bharathi Bima Yojana. They could contact the Indian Embassy in Kuwait if they encountered problems
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Human Trafficking racket busted by Kadapa Police in A.P.
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Human Trafficking racket busted (three traffickers arrested).
Kadapa (A.P., India) 29/06/2008:- Brief facts of the case is one victim (Name with held) : aged 40 yrs, native of Gorlamudivedu village, Rayachoty, Approached Pasupuleti Veera Nagaiah who has promised her to send to Kuwait as a maid servant. Veera Nagaiah has collected Rs.40,000/- from the victim and sent her to Kuwait through an unauthorized agent Jeelani of Rayachoty and his brother Mahaboob Basha. In Kuwait one Nazeer another brother of Jeelani has contacted the victim and sold her to a brothel house. The victim was confined in the brothel house for 10 days along with other ladies. One day the victim along with other ladies escaped through a bathroom window of the brothel house, ran away to Police station without any passports or other documents. Kuwait police sent her to jail. Subsequently with the help of Indian Embassy she along with another lady of Rayachoty, 3 more victims of West Godawari were sent back to India . Basing on the complaint of the victim a case in Crime No.110/08, u/s 420 IPS, Sec 24 (1) AP Immigration Act, Sec 3,4,5 of PITA Act of Rayachoty (U) PS against the accused Jeelani, Pasupuleti Veera Nagaiah, Mahaboob Basha of Rayachoty and Nazeer resident of Kuwait. Rayachoty Urban C.I arrested Pasupultei Veera Nagaiah (A1), Jeelani (A2), and sent for remand. On 27-6-08 Mahaboob Basha was arrested and sent for judicial remand. Further investigation is in progress to arrest Nazeer and his associates in Kuwait . It is learnt that earlier also Jeelani and Nazeer has trafficked ladies to Kuwait . We are alerting the citizens that not to get trapped in the human trafficking scam. Process visa papers through authorized registered immigration agent, obtain insurance from Pravasi Bharathiya Beema Yojana. In case of any problems arise in Kuwait they can immediately contact Indian Embassy in Kuwait as well as send information against bogus agents to SP, Kadapa Fax No.08562 244967, email address: sp@kdp.appolice.gov.in
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Responsibility To Curb Human Trafficking Rests On Society
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Special Article from The Statesman Illegality spreadResponsibility To Curb Human Trafficking Rests On SocietyBy Manjumohan Mukherjee The movement of people from one country to another is an inevitable outcome of globalisation. According to the 2005 report of the UNFPA titled State of World Population, the number of international migrants was estimated at 17.5 crore. The major problem connected with this migration is human trafficking and smuggling. Human trafficking is a lucrative criminal activity. According to the International Labour Organisation, it can generate up to $31 billion a year, most of it from forced labour and exploitation. The trafficking and smuggling protocols, generally referred to as the Palermo protocols, came into force on 23 December 2003 and 28 January 2004, respectively. By definition, trafficking denotes the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or “receipt of persons” by threat, force, coercion, abduction and fraud. Exploitation can involve prostitution or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labour or slavery. No crimeBetween 800,000 and 1.2 million women and children are victims of trafficking the world over. Human trafficking is the world’s third largest illegal business, generating $9.5 billion in revenue each year. Civil society must ensure that the victims don’t suffer from any stigma. They must be brought back to the mainstream with dignity for they have committed no crime.West Bengal, along with Bihar, accounts for the maximum numbers of girls who have been trafficked into the country from abroad simply for prostitution. According to figures available till 2005, this so-called “importation of girls” has increased by nearly 67.4 per cent. The National Crime Records Bureau, which recently released its data, states that 149 cases were recorded across the country in 2005, compared to only 89 in 2004 and 46 in 2003.While Bihar tops the list with 74 such cases, accounting for nearly 49.7 per cent of the total, West Bengal stands second with 61 and accounting for 40.9 per cent of the total. According to the Indian Penal Code, if a girl below the age of 21 years is trafficked into India from any other country or the state of Jammu and Kashmir, it is considered “importation” and is punishable with up to 10 years of imprisonment.But statistics reveal that the highest number of pending cases of violence against women are those of importation. Out of the 248 persons who were arrested on charges of violence against women, only 148 could be settled by the court. In another departure from the nationwide trend, West Bengal accounts for the lowest number of rape victims who do not know the identity of the offenders. National statistics reveal that the victims in 84.6 per cent of the rape cases knew their offenders. On the contrary, only in 2.9 per cent cases in West Bengal were the offenders known to the victims. West Bengal has a porous border with its economically weak neighbours. As a result, girls are frequently trafficked into the state and forced into prostitution. While many of the victims are rescued and the offenders arrested, many cases go unreported. Most of the girls come from poor families and are lured into the trap with the promise of a lucrative job. The major factors behind human trafficking are poverty, political instability, unexpected changes in economic or political condition, natural and man-made disasters, poor governance, advance in communication and transportation, easy profits made from exploitation, marginalisation of the poor, and lack of information about the realities and dangers of trafficking and smuggling. The administration shows little concern to tackle it seriously, allowing operators to indulge in a part-time or whole-time illegal profession with inter-state and international ramifications. Even so-called men of position are involved. For instance, the BJP MP, Babubhai Katara, was arrested for trying to smuggle a woman and a teenager to Canada. West Bengal has emerged as a major hub over the last 10 years, with 15,750 girls and women having been abducted and kidnapped in 2005. The procuring of minor girls shot up from 2.7 per cent to 13.8 per cent in 2005, and the number of girls sold to prostitution rose from 26.7 to 88 per cent. Bengal serves as a source, transit and destination for trafficking in women and children. The state’s border with Bangladesh, Bhutan and 14 major points with Nepal in North Bengal have made it a vulnerable location. Its common boundaries with Orissa. Bihar, Jharkhand and Sikkim have made it a safe haven for traffickers. The problem of child trafficking is endemic in the districts of Darjeeling, Jalpaiguri, Cooch Behar, Murshidabad, North and South Dinajpur, Malda, Midnapore, Nadia, North and South 24-Parganas.Kolkata is also a nerve centre with 21 large brothels acting as active links with numerous “flying sex zones” across the country. Nearly 10 per cent of the sex workers in the city have come from Bangladesh and Nepal. The city accounts for 45.5 per cent of minor girls brought into the state. The Bengal-Bangladesh border is a key entry point. There are 14 such points from Nepal to North Bengal. The two dangerous dens in Murshidabad are located in Jalangi and Domkol. The trafficked girls are confined to the prostitution centres of North Bengal, Nadia, South 24-Parganas and Kolkata before being sent to Delhi, Mumbai, Jaipur, Ahmedabad, Pune, and even places in Kashmir, Punjab and Uttar Pradesh. More than 45.5 per cent girls are trafficked through Kolkata. According to the National Human Rights Commission report, Bengal is fourth in terms of trafficking.A large number of missing cases are not reported. The children leave their homes with the knowledge of their parents. Therefore, no complaints are filed with the police. Initially, the parents don’t realise that their children are being trafficked as they are taken away with the promise of either jobs or marriage. In most of the cases those who lure these children away happen to be their own relatives or someone known to them. Good earningsOn an average the traffickers earn Rs 25,000-30,000 on each transaction. Community policing is essential to check the menace. Roadside restaurants, hotels and dhabas are used as conduits in the network. Regular police raids are essential to arrest the culprits and rescue the victims. The registration of the names of domestic helps at the local police station must be made compulsory.It isn’t just the responsibility of the police. It is eventually society’s responsibility. And that includes the NGOs, panchayats, municipalities, magistrates, religious leaders, the media, ministry of home affairs, department of social welfare, and the department of education. Even the private sector has a vital role to play. Chambers of commerce can prepare an anti-human trafficking policy and tell their members to sign it with a commitment that they will not use any product of forced labour and also ask the vendors and clients to sign on the same document before conducting business. As poverty is the root cause, it is important to focus on micro-finance. The rural society needs to be convinced that a victim ought to be rehabilitated with due respect so that she can lead a normal life if she wishes to.The position of women and children can be strengthened through education, health and nutrition. This will give them the opportunity to lead a normal life.The writer is with the Department of Social Work, Visva-Bharati
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Minor girls forced into prostitution in India
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Wednesday, June 4, 2008 (Pune) Thousands of young girls in India are forced into prostitution every day. Some of them are as young as ten years. NDTV met one such victim, who was lucky enough to escape. She narrates her plight and that of many others like her still languishing in brothels. ''I was kidnapped from Hyderabad and sold here. I was physically assaulted and forced into prostitution. I was injected so I do not suffer from pain,'' said the victim of prostitution. Over the last 11 months, this girl, has been sold to about 11,000 customers. She is just 15. Kidnapped by an organised gang from her hometown Hyderabad, she was sold in Budhwar Peth, the red light district of Pune for Rs 35,000. What followed was a nightmare. There seemed no exit from the hell she was living in but then quite luckily a customer agreed to let her use his mobile phone and she immediately called her family. Within days, the police had found her. She was rescued but she says there are thousands of girls like her still trapped inside.''There are girls even as young as 7-10 years old. As they grow up, they are pushed into this trade,'' she added. Off camera, she also tells us, many police raids are stage managed because most brothel owners are tipped off about the raid. So the success of the rescue operations are limited. ''In the last one year, we have rescued some 330 girls. Whenever we get information, we conduct a raid and free the girls,'' said V T Pawar, Senior Inspector, Faraskhana Police Station.''It's true that now more and more young girls are being forced into this profession, as it has been always, because of the demand,'' said Tejaswini Sevekari, Director, Saheli. What is lacking is very close monitoring of such brothels without which thousands of young girls slip through the cracks many of them never to be found.
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Nepalese girls among 24 minors 'rescued'
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The Times of India - Nepalese girls among 24 minors 'rescued' 14 Jun 2008, 0414 hrs IST, Suhas Vyas,TNN AKOLA: As many as 24 girl artists employed with a circus group were taken into custody for interrogation following a raid on Friday morning. The Raj Mahal Circus shows began here at Akola Cricket Club ground on June 5. Assistant labour commissioner A S Belekar took custody of these 24 girls — most of them Nepalese and some Asamese. The Nepalese embassy made a formal request to the government of India informing about the freeing the Nepalese girls employed by the circus, according Philip Holmes, founder director of Esther Benjamins Trust (EBT), a Nepal based non-government organisation. An EBT team led by Holmes contacted the local police and the action was taken following a directive issued to this affect by district collector Dr Srikar Pardesi. Holmes, accompanied by his associates Shailaja C M and Dilu Tamang and Nandita Rao, legal advisor of Child Line, said there was no law about prevention of child labour in Nepal and EBT was working for the prevention of illegal human trafficking, child labour, drugs etc. Talking to TOI, Nandita Rao said preliminary investigation revealed that the girl artists were "treated as prisoners and bonded labour on a meagre wages". They were in a way purchased by paying a meagre sum from their parents, she alleged. Many of the girls female expressed their willingness to go return home. "The girls would be taken back to their native place if they desired so," Rao said. Raj Mahal Circus is Kanpur-based and came into being in 1995. Its owner Fateh Khan executed a unique agreement with the parents of each girl artist to employ them as as an apprentice artist on a meagre wages of Rs 100 per month and providing food, clothes, shelter and medical aid to be borne by the circus management. The execution of agreement was not registered and was made at Kanpur. Prima facie it appeared that the girls were bonded labours employed by the circus on the pretext of training various acrobatic skills. Khan allegedly paid only Rs 1000 to the parents of the girls initially and laid a condition that the parents would have to reimburse the expenses incurred on the girls by the circus management in case they want to take the girls back.
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