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P reventing trafficking in women and girls

P reventing trafficking in women and girls. Anju Dubey Pandey , Resource person SIRD ODISHA. Agenda. Human Trafficking Vulnerability of women and girls Prevention and Role of EWRs. TNA: Y/N. I understand the concept of trafficking and its elements

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P reventing trafficking in women and girls

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  1. Preventing trafficking in women and girls Anju DubeyPandey, Resource person SIRD ODISHA

  2. Agenda • Human Trafficking • Vulnerability of women and girls • Prevention and Role of EWRs

  3. TNA: Y/N • I understand the concept of trafficking and its elements • It happens only through force and for sexual exploitation • Men always migrate for work of their own free will and therefore do not experience violence • Trafficked victims are found only in brothels • All traffickers are from cities • A FIR for a trafficked case can be lodged only at the point of destination • It is the individuals responsibility to protect herself • Only the victim and/or her family members can file an FIR • I am aware of Anti-Human Trafficking Units, Special Juvenile Police Unit and Trafficking Police Officer • Just Knowledge among EWRs can prevent trafficking

  4. Human Trafficking: Global • Human trafficking a systematic violation of human rights • It is the third most profitable illicit trade, after that of arms and drugs • Generates about US$ 217 billion in revenue, annually*, - linked to other organized crimes - human smuggling, drug trafficking, and money laundering • ILO ** - there are 2.45 million trafficking victims currently under exploitative conditions - estimated that another 1.2 million persons are trafficked annually * Trafficking in Persons Report, United States Department of State, 2006, p. 13. ** State of the World Population Report, UNFPA, 2006, p. 44.

  5. Trafficked Persons: South Asia • Home to second largest numbers of internationally trafficked persons…150,000 annually* • India, Bangladesh and Nepal are major source countries for trafficking of women and children • Estimated that 50% of all female sex trafficking victims in South Asia are under age 18 at the time of exploitation** • Media Report : 6,88751 ‘registered’ sex workers in India : not mandatory for them to have a health certificate on STDs *** • However, due to the clandestine nature, all statistics, even at their best are inaccurate * Highest estimates from South East Asia: 225,000 , State of the World Population Report, UNFPA, 2006, pg 45 ** US State Department, Trafficking in Persons Report *** Times of India July 2010, reported as reply by the GOI to a RTI filed by a New Delhi resident

  6. Fundamental Rights - Constitution Article 21 – Protection of Life and Personal Liberty Article 23 – Prohibition of traffic in human beings and forced labour The 2002 SAARC Convention on Preventing and Combating Trafficking in Women and Children for Prostitution, defines trafficking as : “the moving, selling or buying of women and children for prostitution within and outside a country for monetary or other considerations with or without the consent of the person subjected to trafficking”.

  7. Definition of Trafficking The UN Protocol, 2000 to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, especially Women and Children (Trafficking Protocol) which supplements the Convention against Transnational Organized Crime states that “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.”

  8. Human Trafficking: Elements (Article 3)

  9. What Is Human Trafficking?

  10. Trafficking : a process 1.RecruitmentPlace of Origin 2.TransportationPlace of Transit 3.Exploitation Place of Destination

  11. Forms of Trafficking • Forced labor • Bonded labor • Debt bondage • Child soldiers • Camel jockeying • Organ trade • Begging • Illicit adoption • Circus bondage • Forced marriage • Sexual exploitation • Children exploited in commercial sex • Etcetc

  12. Vulnerabilities • Poverty • Lack of livelihood opportunities • Relative disparities of income, employment and livelihoods • Illiteracy • Lack of economic development • Food insecurity • Increase in demand for women and children for sexual and labor exploitation • Growth in crime syndicates • Poor law enforcement • Insensitive social and cultural practices • Natural and human made disasters • Conflict • War • Etc etc….

  13. Whoare more Vulnerable… • Street children with no guardians; • Adolescent girls, adolescents in general; • Children from families in crisis (e.g., alcoholic parents, traumatized from war or civil conflict); • Single women with children (unmarried, divorced, widowed, or abandoned); • Single women (often traumatized through stigmatization e.g., rape victim, suspicions regarding morality, etc.); and • Women/girl migrants—either alone or with families. • Girl children from vulnerable families/places • Women and girls who are illiterate • Women and girls from disadvantaged groups (SC, ST, girls from Bedia, Kanjar, Devdasi, Nat communities) • Women and girls from areas affected by natural disasters, political conflict etc • Young girls trafficked for child marriage…others….

  14. Vulnerability Mapping : A study by UN Women • Social and demographic (SC, ST, female literacy rate, age specific sex ratio, crime against women, prevalence of HIV AIDS, female out-migration) • Economic(lack of livelihood, ownership of land, food insecurity…poverty, • Cultural(e.g. Devdasi, Jogini, Nat, Bedia ) • Environmental (natural calamities)

  15. VULNERABILITY MAPPING

  16. Who Are the Victims? Source: U.S. Departments of State and Justice, 2006

  17. Who is a trafficker/offender A trafficker/offender in trafficking crimes includes all persons, agencies or institutions: • Involved in any act in the process of trafficking • Who gains/makes profit/exploits - As the trafficked person passes through a chain, - From the final point of source area through the transit area to the point of final destination and - From any act involved in the process of exploitation of the trafficked person(s)

  18. Who can be Traffickers : • Recruiter/Agent of Recruiter • Seller of trafficked person • Buyer of trafficked person • Transporter • Conspirator • ‘Customer’/clientele, who create/perpetuate demand • Pimp • Brothel madam • Brothel managers • Financier • Parent(s)/guardian(s) who knowingly sell/cause to sell/traffic their children/ward

  19. Scene of Crime (SOC) • the source point (e.g., place of recruitment) • the trafficking routes (including mode of transport) • the transit points (e.g., halting places enroute) • the destination point • the points of exploitation (e.g. brothel) • the places where the ‘products’ of exploitation were transferred to (eg. in a case where the CSE was to produce pornography, the SOC includes places where the pornographic materials were sent to, stored, transported, and places where they were sold/purchased, etc).

  20. Modus operandi of traffickers • Offering them jobs as domestic servants • Promising jobs in the film world • Coercion Offering money • Luring them with ‘pleasure trips’ • Making false promises of marriage • Befriending them by giving goodies • Offering shelter to girls who have run away from home or are street children • Offering to take them on pilgrimages

  21. trafficking a continuing crime Trafficking is an organized and continuing crime. Multiple crimes can be culled out under trafficking such as: abduction, kidnapping, illegal detainment, illegal confinement, criminal intimidation, hurt, grievous hurt, sexual assault, outraging modesty, rape, unnatural offences, selling and buying of human beings, servitude, criminal conspiracy, abetment, etc. Therefore, multiple abuse and abusers located at different points of time and place together constitute the organized crime of trafficking.

  22. Some issues… • What does the preponderance of women and girls indicate? • Why are more women and girls trafficked ? • Why are more women and girls trafficked for SE?

  23. Does it mean that women and girls experience trafficking in a different way than men and boys? • If yes, what is the difference? • What are the specific vulnerabilities of women and girls?

  24. How are vulnerabilities linked and one leads to another? (Dalit, Poor,Young,Widowed,Woman, HIV &AIDs) • Where and how does gender intersect with other social categories of caste, class, religion, race and ethnicity? • How the cause-effect indicators reflect a thin line of difference : sometimes difficult to differentiate the cause from effect

  25. Therefore … • preponderance of women and girls means it may not help to consider the notion of ‘trafficking in women’ within the context of ‘trafficking in person’ • the gender neutral generalization although broadens the concept may prevent us from discovering specific features of trafficking in women and girls • a gendered perspective will reveal the specific ways in which women and girls experiences of trafficking are different from those of men and boys • situate in the context of women and girls as ‘Rights Holders’

  26. A gendered perspective on trafficking achieves change by: • Acknowledging that both men and women are trafficked; • Addressing the shared and differed experiences undergone by women and men in trafficking with regards to their vulnerabilities, violations and consequences; and • Addressing the divergent impact policies have on men/boys and women/girls

  27. If gender inequities are socially conditioned…how can we change them at an individual and societal level in the direction of justice, equity and partnership between men and women? • Current initiatives/interventions/programmes face at least following three problems : • Lack of prevention initiatives that engage local governance • Lack of attention to change societal attitudes • Traditional vocational trainings have often not led to sustainable livelihoods in rural source areas

  28. Prevention • Prevention at the demand point • Prevention at the transit area • Prevention at the source point

  29. GROUPWORK ROLE OF EWRs IN PREVENTION OF TRAFFICKING

  30. Prevention and Role of EWR Go back to source areas: Evidence based research…data that is sensitive, comparable and appropriate • Strengthen Civil Registration System, child protection Capacity development • Capacity building of local government functionaries • Build capacities of fellow ERs Advocacy for change • Trafficking issues to be raised in PalliSabhas/Gram Sabhas • Convergence of government programs • Using community resources to create Centresof action to prevent trafficking in source areas (e.g. common property resources, MGNREGA) • Committees as mandated under the Odisha PR Act • Gender responsive budgeting

  31. Women and Girls • Capacity to assess their own vulnerability to trafficking through self awareness and knowledge • Sustainable Livelihood options • Strong sense of empowerment (most at risk to trafficking in the community are encouraged to access micro credit services) • With Community based Anti trafficking task force • Vigilance, Effective surveillance and watch on suspects • Maintain a list of NGOs showing their expertise, specialization as well as contact address, telephone, e-mail, etc. • Identify the vulnerable persons/areas and focus attention on them. Empower them. Let this be a priority. • Pay special attention to the most vulnerable persons. This needs to be top priority. • Mount surveillance for suspects and look-out for victims • Public Awareness, legal awareness, information booths, temporary shelters • Anti trafficking and safe migration messages • With local justice systems (both formal and informal) • Nyayapanchayats • NyayaSamitis

  32. Good Practice PrayasBharti, an NGO based at Patna, was instrumental in rehabilitation of a trafficked girl of 16 years, who was lodged in jail for two years on the charge of ‘soliciting’. The villagers refused to accept her back,‘branding’ her as prostitute. PrayasBharti spent one full day with the entire villagers, speaking to them, coaxing them, and finally convincing them that the girl is a ‘victim of trafficking’ and a ‘child in need of care and protection’. The commendable initiative by this NGO helped in rehabilitation of the girl.

  33. Bhoruka Public Welfare Trust has done door-to-door- survey of the vulnerability of women and children in those areas which were trafficking-prone. After the survey, the empowerment programmes which they initiated in partnership with state government and state police agencies have produced such encouraging results that they could ensure that the erstwhile trafficking-prone areas are now “sanitized” and are “trafficking- free”.

  34. Women’s and Girls’ vulnerabilities to trafficking are a result of unequal power relations between and among men and women in the society… and we can CHANGE this…

  35. UN Women South Asia Sub-regional Office 19-A RajdootMarg Chanakyapuri New Delhi 110021 Phone No. 011-26119120/28 anju.pandey@unwomen.org

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