As Modi Meets Obama, Activists Call for Talks on Human Trafficking

Human rights activists urge Obama to raise concerns over India’s slavery problem as Modi visits Washington.

Reuters
World
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US President Barack Obama listens as Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaks to members of the media. (Photo: AP)
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US President Barack Obama listens as Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaks to members of the media. (Photo: AP)
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US President Barack Obama should press the visiting Prime Minister of India to strengthen his country’s anti-trafficking laws and deliver justice to victims, human rights campaigners said on Tuesday.

Obama met with Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the White House on Tuesday to discuss economic growth, climate change, clean energy and defence cooperation.

However, activists called on Obama to use Modi’s fourth visit to the United States since becoming prime minister in 2014 to focus on India’s anti-slavery record.
US President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Narendra Modi shake hands before their meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington. (Photo: AP)

India has the most slaves in the world with more than 18 million people trapped in debt bondage, forced into marriage, sold to brothels or born into servitude, according to the 2016 Global Slavery Index.

More people are enslaved in India than in any other country in the world, with millions of Indian men, women, and children trapped in debt bondage and forced to perform strenuous work.
Amy Sobel, Human Rights First, a Washington-based pressure group.

“Prime Minister Modi’s trip to the United States is an opportunity for President Obama to raise concerns over India’s progress in combating modern slavery while ensuring that the US-India relationship is grounded in respect for human dignity and fundamental rights.”

Forty percent of the world’s estimated 45.8 million slaves are in India, although the scourge exists in all 167 nations surveyed in last month’s Global Slavery Index, according to researchers behind the list.

The US State Department’s 2015 Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report shows that India’s primary trafficking problem is forced labour.

Often trapped in debt, victims including women and children are forced to work in brick kilns, rice mills, agriculture, embroidery factories, and other industries to pay off what they owe to their traffickers.

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A child labourer shows his hands smeared with what he says are chemicals as he sits inside a police station in New Delhi after being rescued. (Photo: Reuters)

The TIP report ranks India as a Tier 2 country, which means the government has not fully complied with US standards but is making significant efforts to meet those standards.

Last week a senior US lawmaker raised concerns over India’s human rights record, noting that the 2015 TIP report indicated that Indian officials at various levels of government were complicit in human trafficking.

The government did not report investigations, prosecutions or convictions of government officials complicit in human trafficking offences,
Senator Ben Cardin, Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Indian officials, however, have pointed to a slew of initiatives taken by Modi’s government over the last two years which they said was proof that New Delhi was taking the issue seriously.

These include the introduction of a new anti-trafficking law, an online platform to find missing children and increased focus on the rehabilitation of victims of slavery.

Last week, India unveiled a draft of its first comprehensive anti-human trafficking law, which provides for more shelters, a rehabilitation fund, fast-track courts to ensure speedy trials, and a federal investigative agency to boost convictions.

(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)

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