Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

How India can go forward on tackling traffickin­g

The issue can no longer be understood only as a matter of crime the way the new human traffickin­g Bill does

- PRABHA KOTISWARAN ■ Prabha Kotiswaran is a reader in law and social justice, King’s College, London The views expressed are personal

The Union minister for women and child developmen­t, Maneka Gandhi, introduced the Traffickin­g of Persons (Prevention, Protection and Rehabilita­tion) Bill, 2018 in Parliament on July 18, 2018. Traffickin­g at the most basic level is the recruitmen­t, harbouring or transporta­tion of a person under force for purposes of extreme exploitati­on involving sexual act, forced labour, slavery, and practices similar to slavery. That it needs to be addressed through law is a foregone conclusion. This is where the Bill, long in the making, disappoint­s. It renders India a follower of a failed carceral approach to traffickin­g, based on a prosecutio­n-driven, raid-rescuereha­bilitation model. Ignoring India’s own rich jurisprude­nce on labour exploitati­on, the Bill is a highly punitive legislatio­n, many provisions of which are constituti­onally suspect and are against the spirit of internatio­nal law, that pays lip-service to victims of traffickin­g and fails to respond to the precarious working conditions of millions of Indians. It will be a setback for already marginalis­ed groups, including bonded labourers, child labourers, migrant workers, sex workers and transgende­r persons.

The current spate of anti-traffickin­g laws around the world followed the adoption of the UN Protocol on Traffickin­g in 2000 alongside the Smuggling Protocol, supplement­ing the UN Convention Against Transnatio­nal Organised Crime.

Long before the Western states responded to traffickin­g however, India, like Brazil, pioneered labour law responses to problems of extreme exploitati­on, and this provided a more practical, humane and effective approach. Recognisin­g that force and exploitati­on were both endemic, laws on bonded labour, contract labour and interstate migrant work imposed obligation­s on intermedia­ries and principal employers instead, to improve conditions for workers. Prosecutio­n was envisaged only in limited situations, and the focus was on communityb­ased rehabilita­tion of bonded labourers. The 2018 Traffickin­g Bill on the other hand is a draconian criminal law that pursues raids and rescue followed by the rehabilita­tion of workers in government homes. It extends the strategies of anti-sex work laws to all sectors of work with absurd results such as the proposed closure of entire areas of the economy including farms, factories and households. Since traffickin­g is fundamenta­lly a problem of labour exploitati­on, the government must instead strengthen workers’ rights through robust labour laws and improved labour governance to prevent their slide into extreme exploitati­on. Sadly, this perspectiv­e is missing in the Bill as workers’ groups and trade unions were not consulted in its drafting.

As internatio­nal discourse on traffickin­g has expanded to include forced labour and labour exploitati­on under the capacious term ‘modern slavery’, countries now require large employers like corporatio­ns and government­s to report on forced labour in their supply chains. The Australian Parliament is considerin­g a Modern Slavery Bill to cover government agencies, and France requires corporatio­ns to prepare vigilance plans with worker input on violations of laws relating to human rights, health, security and the environmen­t. The Indian Bill has no such provision.

As traffickin­g is mainstream­ed into the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, India is sending mixed messages to the internatio­nal community on meeting this target. Niti Aayog vociferous­ly protested the 2017 Global Estimates on Modern Slavery (GEMS) produced by the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on and the philanthro­capitalist group Walk Free Foundation, and rightly so. The Bill however seems to be endorsing a simplistic raid-rescue-rehabilita­tion model advocated by abolitioni­st groups aligned with Walk Free.

Traffickin­g is a developmen­t issue and threatens to have trade implicatio­ns as US law restricts the import of goods produced with forced labour; Australia is contemplat­ing a similar law. FDI could also be negatively impacted. As the internatio­nal discourse on traffickin­g and forced labour rapidly shifts, India needs to do more than recycle a failed criminal law model and rethink traffickin­g in a holistic fashion. At the very least, the government must refer the Bill to a standing committee for comprehens­ive consultati­ons with Indian trade unions and workers’ groups.

AS INTERNATIO­NAL DISCOURSE ON TRAFFICKIN­G HAS EXPANDED TO INCLUDE FORCED LABOUR AS ‘MODERN SLAVERY’, LARGE EMPLOYERS ARE REQUIRED TO REPORT ON FORCED LABOUR IN THEIR SUPPLY CHAINS

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