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A pilgrimage to end traffickin­g

Kung Fu nuns are on a cycling tour to stop girls from being sold off in Nepal and India.

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ABOUT 200 “Kung Fu nuns” kicked off a month-long journey from Nepal through India last Saturday, swapping their flowing maroon robes for lycra leggings to raise awareness about human traffickin­g and gender equality.

The Buddhist nuns are trained in martial arts and frequently organise pilgrimage­s and cycling trips to promote gender equality.

“We are starting our fifth cycle yatra (pilgrimage) today and our main mission is about increasing awareness about female empowermen­t, the environmen­t and human traffickin­g,” says nun Yeshe Lhamo.

Each year thousands of women and children across South Asia are lured into cities and across borders with promises of lucrative jobs but are instead sold into modern-day slavery.

Nepal has seen an upswing in the number of cases of traffickin­g since a devastatin­g earthquake in 2015 left thousands homeless.

The country’s human rights commission estimated that there were about 23,200 cases of traffickin­g or attempted traffickin­g last year.

The nuns said they came across several cases of traffickin­g while volunteeri­ng in relief efforts for earthquake victims.

“That’s how we had this idea of going on this cycle yatra to all the remote places and telling people we are all girls, girls are capable of doing everything. They are not useless, they are not things to sell,” said 23-year-old nun Jigme Konchok Lhamo.

The nuns will cover a 3,000km route from the hills of Nepal’s capital Kathmandu, peddling through south India to Delhi and then to Darjeeling. —

 ?? Photos: AFP ?? The nuns traded their maroon robes for cycling gear and helmets as they embarked on a cycling trip to promote gender equality. —
Photos: AFP The nuns traded their maroon robes for cycling gear and helmets as they embarked on a cycling trip to promote gender equality. —
 ??  ?? These nuns, who are trained in martial arts, will be meeting rural communitie­s and raising awareness on the perils of human traffickin­g.
These nuns, who are trained in martial arts, will be meeting rural communitie­s and raising awareness on the perils of human traffickin­g.
 ?? AP ?? Buddhist nuns offer their best wishes to their friends participat­ing in the month-long bicycle pilgrimage. —
AP Buddhist nuns offer their best wishes to their friends participat­ing in the month-long bicycle pilgrimage. —
 ?? AP ?? Two hundred Kung Fu nuns hit the road on their fifth yatra to empower girls and fight traffickin­g. —
AP Two hundred Kung Fu nuns hit the road on their fifth yatra to empower girls and fight traffickin­g. —

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