advertisement
The number of women being trafficked from Bangladesh into Mumbai brothels is rising as part of a greater migration from India’s eastern neighbour, and police and social groups need to do more to rescue and repatriate them, a charity said on Thursday.
The total includes some women from India’s eastern state of West Bengal.
Of the 213 children of sex workers enrolled at Prerana’s night care centre in Kamathipura from 2010-15, 128 had a Bengali-speaking mother, the data showed. Similar increases have been seen in other parts of the city, Patkar said.
There are more than 3 million people of Bangladeshi origin in India, according to official data. Hundreds arrive undocumented every day, often crossing the 4,000 km border with a trafficker or “agent” who preys on poor, rural communities with promises of good jobs and a better life.
Rising migration within Asia is putting growing numbers of migrants at risk of being trafficked and abused by human smuggling networks, the United Nations Office for Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said in a report last year on the criminal trade, which is worth $2 billion a year in Asia.
The trade, however, is underground and the real number is likely to be much higher. The numbers are expected to rise as migration within Asia grows.
Trafficked Bangladeshi women in Mumbai are often too afraid and ignorant of their rights to seek help, Patkar said. They are also reluctant to bring charges against their traffickers after being rescued from the brothels.
The agreement has made it easier to rescue and repatriate victims of trafficking, some of whom were previously treated as illegal immigrants.
This week, for the first time, a Bangladeshi trafficker was convicted on the strength of the victim’s testimony given over a video link from Dhaka, where she had been repatriated after her rescue from a brothel in Mumbai. Activists and lawyers say such depositions could help curb trafficking.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)
Published: undefined