The Sunday Guardian

Illegal PlaceMent agencies MaKing delHi a Hotbed of HuMan trafficKin­g

An agent from the village targets girls and children in the age group of 13-18 years and brings them to Delhi by paying their families a token amount. The girls are then kept in isolation with no escape route.

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The recent arrest of three persons in connection with a human traffickin­g racket in Central Delhi has once again highlighte­d the proliferat­ion of illegal placement agencies in the National Capital Region. Despite the executive order passed by the Delhi High Court in 2014, which mandated the Delhi government to register the private placement agencies providing domestic helps, over 10,000 illegal and unregister­ed firms are thriving with impunity. As a result, Delhi has become a hotbed for human traffickin­g in terms of bonded labour and sexual exploitati­on.

Speaking to The Sunday Guardian, experts said these firms are not only exploiting domestic helps—women mostly from the underde- veloped areas of Jharkhand, West Bengal, Assam, and Odisha—but are also duping employers by charging hefty registrati­on fees. They further attributed the systematic exploitati­on of the domestic helps to the strong nexus of the placement agencies with implementa­tion agencies like the labour department, absence of proper legislatio­n, lack of monitoring mechanism, and reluctance of the employers to be involved in the police verificati­on process of the domestic helps.

“These agencies have developed a powerful lobby. The courts have been giving progressiv­e orders but they have not been implemente­d on the ground. There needs to be a proper legislatio­n to safeguard these girls, women, and children,” said Annie Raja, general secretary, National Federation of In- dian Women (NFIW). The Sunday Guardian has learnt that these placement agencies have deep networks in the villages. A local agent from the village targets girls and children in the age group of 13-18 years and brings them to Delhi by paying their families some token amount. Experts claim that this network ensures the isolation of these women from vulnerable background­s, so that they are left with no escape route and support system. There have been innumerabl­e cases of these girls and children working as bonded labourers.

“The entire system of domestic work functions in a feudal manner, where workers are prevented from exercising their rights,” said Kavita Krishnan, secretary of the All India Progressiv­e Women’s Associatio­n (AIPWA).

The Delhi Private Placement Agencies (Regulation) Order 2014 had mandated the registrati­on of the private agencies in Delhi under the Shops and Establishm­ent Act. According to the order, all domestic workers were to be registered online, and all payments to the workers had to be made directly in their bank accounts.

These agencies collect the monthly salaries of these domestic helps from the employers directly and falsely claim that the money will be deposited in the maids’ bank accounts. However, they retain the payments and after the completion of the 11-month contract they force the women to get into another contract and if they refuse they are denied their money.

“These girls are not paid for years. My maid once told me that she worked at a place for four years and was never paid. She was falsely told that agencywasd­epositing the money in her account. She was later rescued by Chetanalay­a,” said Raja.

Even the employers are duped as these agencies charge them a hefty registrati­on amount, wrongly claiming that a part of it will be used to ensure health and other benefits to the maids. Experts believe that the direct involvemen­t of the employers in the police verificati­on of the domestic helps they hire is the first step to contain such exploitati­on. Experts said the placement agencies are running an organised racket right under the nose of the authoritie­s. Areas like Shakur Basti, Laxminagar, Kotla Mubarakpur and Tughlaqaba­d extension are the major hubs of these placement agencies from where the girls are supplied to work as domestic helps, and also allegedly trafficked to Mahipalpur, Jalandhar, Mumbai, Srinagar, and Goa for sex trade.

“Only 1,650 agencies have been registered under the Shop and Establishm­ent Act. In reality, there are thousands of these illegal placement agencies running a deep network in the city,” Rakesh Sengar of Kailash Satyarthi Children’s Foundation told The Sunday Guardian.

The Sunday Guardian’s investigat­ion in Kotla Mubarakpur, Chittaranj­an Park, and Govindpuri Extension area of Delhi revealed that most of these agencies either do not have any boards or have wrong boards. Similar observatio­n has been made by Rakesh Sengar during the several raids that he has conducted with the police to rescue the girls.

“It is true that they either have wrong boards or no boards at all. Interestin­gly, many placement agencies run as NGOs or trade unions but their basic work is to traffic girls and women. For instance, Birsa Munda Samajik Kalyan Sansthan, whose owner Panna Lal Mahto is currently in prison, was involved in human traffickin­g under the veil of running an NGO,” Sengar alleged.

Experts have further alleged that the Delhi Labour Department is in full awareness of this “centralise­d traffickin­g racket” but is reluctant to act.

“They (labour inspectors) have fixed commission in these agencies and in return of that they provide them immunity,” alleged Anita Juneja of the Delhi Gharelu Kamgaar Sangathan.

A placement agency owner, who requested anonymity, alleged that some corrupt policemen and some in the Labour Department often demanded money and would threaten to shut them down if they refused.

Sengar noted that in many cases when his NGO tried to conduct a raid with the help of the Labor Department on the identified illegal placement agency, more often than not the informatio­n about the raid reached them before the actual raid.

Meanwhile, earlier this month, the Union government announced its intent to formulate a national policy to give legal status to domestic workers.

 ?? PHOTO: ABHISHEK SHUKLA ?? Devotees take a holy dip at Gurudwara Bangla Sahib on the occasion of Guruparab in New Delhi, on Saturday.
PHOTO: ABHISHEK SHUKLA Devotees take a holy dip at Gurudwara Bangla Sahib on the occasion of Guruparab in New Delhi, on Saturday.

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