Hindustan Times (Delhi)

New hope for traffickin­g victims

REFORM In absence of a mechanism to monitor safety of those rescued, new bill provides for monitoring by the district antihuman traffickin­g unit

- Moushumi Das Gupta moushumi.gupta@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: “Main ab phir kabhi Dilli nahin aaongi” (I will never come to Delhi again).

This is what the otherwise chirpy 15-year-old would keep repeating to her counsellor at a shelter home in south Delhi where she was brought by the police eight months ago after being rescued from the Nizamuddin railway station to where she had run off to escape abuse — both mental and physical.

The Class 2 drop-out hails from a village in Jharkhand’s Latehar district. She had heard stories about the good life people had in “Dilli”, and would often ask her eldest brother to take her there. Limited sources of i ncome ensured her family did not object to the idea. Not long after, the brother and the teenager were in Delhi, meeting an acquaintan­ce who would take her to a bungalow in Nizamuddin. Just like that, she had been hired to do all the daily chores for the family of five. And then the abuse began. She would be beaten up for the slightest delay in completing a task and was fed leftovers.

But the real horror began when the family patriarch, in his 60s, forced her to massage him and touch his private parts. She tried to run away after three months but was caught and brought back. The abuse increased. Last December, she managed to run away again, and reached the railway station where the police rescued her and took her to Prayas, the shelter home in Delhi’s Tughlaqaba­d.

Although the police have registered an FIR, investigat­ions have not made much headway as the girl has been unable to provide police with the family’s address.

Eight months on, the teenager has made many friends at the shelter home and is back to being her chirpy self.

“I go to a non-formal school. After the class, I train at the skill centre inside the (shelter) home to become a beautician,” she said.

THE NEW LAW

Her stay at home is coming to an end, though. She will be sent back to her village in a short while.

“The 15-year-old is on top of the world. Though we are also happy that she will be reunited with her family, there is a gnawing concern. We have seen that in many such cases, the chance that the person would become a victim (of traffickin­g) and pushed into forced labour again is quite high,” said Deepshikha Singh, the minor girl’s counsellor and the shelter home’s in-charge.

It is this “re-victimisat­ion” that the new Traffickin­g of Persons (Prevention, Protection and Rehabilita­tion) Bill, 2018 seeks to address with its rehabilita­tion framework. The bill was cleared by the Lok Sabha on July 26 and now awaits the Rajya Sabha nod.

At present, India has no mechanism to monitor the well-being and safety of someone like the 15-year-old once she is sent back.

“For the first time, the proposed law provides for a comprehens­ive framework for rehabilita­ting trafficked victims. The victim will be able to claim compensati­on from the state as her right. A rehabilita­tion fund will be set up, which will be maintained and monitored by a high level National Anti-traffickin­g Relief and Rehabilita­tion committee,” said Amod K Kanth, general secretary of the NGO Prayas JAC (juvenile aid centre) Society.

Where a minor is involved, the bill provides for monitoring by women and children were trafficked in 2016, shows data from the National Crime Records Bureau. In 2015, the figure was 15, 448.

the district anti-human traffickin­g unit to ensure her safety.

THE CONFIDENTI­ALITY

Another important feature in the new bill, according to Kanth, is the de-linking of rehabilita­tion from criminal proceeding­s in traffickin­g cases. “This will enable extension of rehabilita­tion services to survivors whose criminal proceeding­s fail through for no fault of theirs, or who do not want to participat­e in such proceeding­s,” he added.

The bill also provides for maintainin­g confidenti­ality of the victim, if they do not want to appear before the court.

“A year ago, we rescued a woman from a brothel in Delhi’s GB Road. A case was registered in West Bengal from where she was trafficked. Soon after, the victim children were reported missing in 2016. Many of these children may have ended up as victims of traffickin­g.

got married and settled down. But now she is getting summons to appear before the court in person, to give her testimony, and she does not want to. Under the existing law she does not have a choice but to appear,” said Rishi Kant of Shakti Vahini, an NGO that recues trafficked victims across India. Not anymore.

The proposed law provides for maintainin­g the confidenti­ality of the victim. “If a trafficked victim does not want to appear before the court for reasons of safety and confidenti­ality, the designated court can record her statement through video conferenci­ng. It will be her right now,” Rishi Kant said. There are many such clauses in the new bill, Kant added, which has been drafted with the victim in mind.

“Till now, the victim was never the focus. This will change now. For instance, if the victim chooses the inquiry into and trial of offences under the new law , it can be conducted in camera. In another first, the new law gives the victim the right to be heard in all bail matters. Under the existing system, the victim does not even get to know when the accused is granted bail,” he added.

FLIP SIDE

To be sure, the bill has also come under flak from a section of activists and opposition leaders on grounds that it gives excessive power to the police and can be misused against transgende­rs and sex workers who are voluntaril­y in the sex trade. Ruchira Gupta, founder of Apne Aap Worldwide, the anti-sex traffickin­g organisati­on said that the bill in its present form won’t be able to deter sex traffickin­g.

“Of the 16 million women and girls who are trapped in prostituti­on in India today, majority of them were trafficked as girls and belong to the most marginalis­ed groups such as Dalits and Adivasis. If this bill is passed these girls will not get any help as they will not be considered victims of the crime of traffickin­g on account of an existing law that punishes women for soliciting in a public place.”

That’s a charge that the Union women and child developmen­t ministry, which is piloting the bill, has rebutted. “The proposed law will not penalize any voluntary sex workers, only those who have been trafficked, “said a senior WCD ministry official who did not want to be named.

Activists have also charged that the bill has not explicitly defined sexual exploitati­on, leaving grounds for misuse.

Sunitha Krishnan of Prajwala, an NGO involved in rescue and rehabilita­tion of sex traffickin­g victims, said Section 370 of the Indian Penal Code clearly defines sexual exploitati­on.

“Defining it again will only amount to duplicatio­n. One needs to understand that this is the first time that a law acknowledg­es traffickin­g as an organized crime. The existing law focused on criminaliz­ation of offences related to traffickin­g. The new bill starts where Section 370 of IPC ends. It builds a framework to check organised crime,” she added.

For the first time, the proposed law provides for a comprehens­ive framework for rehabilita­ting trafficked victims. The victim will be able to claim compensati­on from the state as her right

AMOD K KANTH, general secretary, NGO Prayas Juvenile Aid Centre Society

 ?? PTI ?? Women tie rakhis on the wrists of BSF jawans on the occasion of Rakshaband­han at AttariWaga­h border post near Amritsar on Sunday.
PTI Women tie rakhis on the wrists of BSF jawans on the occasion of Rakshaband­han at AttariWaga­h border post near Amritsar on Sunday.
 ?? HT FILE ?? Activists say that the new bill has not explicitly defined sexual exploitati­on, leaving room for misuse.
HT FILE Activists say that the new bill has not explicitly defined sexual exploitati­on, leaving room for misuse.

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