Saturday Star

Virtual reality drives the reality of sex trade home

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USED in gaming to bring players close to the action, virtual reality is for the first time being deployed to fight human traffickin­g, with a documentar­y chroniclin­g one girl’s descent into the Indian sex trade.

The documentar­y uses VR technology to immerse viewers into the reality of life for a country girl who is married off by her father then trafficked into a brothel.

“Virtual reality is a powerful form of storytelli­ng and the cause will get more attention from the world over,” Hannah Norling, of My Choices Foundation, said this week.

The non-profit foundation partnered with the charitable arm of a US virtual reality tech firm, Oculus, to make the film, which will premiere at a Texas film festival this month.

The team hopes to zero in on one life to create greater empathy with all victims of traffickin­g, estimated to total nearly 21 million people worldwide. Of these, an estimated 4.5 million people are forced into sex work, most of them women and girls.

Notes to My Father tells the story of one such victim, who narrates to her father the horror of being trafficked. The 11-minute documentar­y gives a 360-degree view of village life as she recounts her abduction-to-escape journey that spans two Indian states.

“Using virtual reality was a strategic choice as it gives a first-person experience of another person’s experience. It is emerging as the number one tool to help people engage and react,” said Norling.

The film is viewed using a VR headset that gives viewers the perception of being physically close to the characters.

The technology has previously been used to document gritty social causes and found to be effective, with a film chroniclin­g a Syrian refugee in Jordan helping to raise funds for Unicef.

The documentar­y will be released on Facebook by September and screened in rural India, Norling said, part of a wider campaign to educate fathers about sex traffickin­g.

A My Choices Foundation study found 90% of trafficked girls came from the most marginalis­ed communitie­s, and that any decision to release a girl usually rested with the father. The girl featured in the documentar­y was married off at 13 by her father who wanted to give her a better life.

Her husband became abusive and the girl was vulnerable when the trafficker­s befriended, drugged then abducted her.

“The entire time she was gone from home, he worked in brick kilns for money and went looking for her.

“He was a good father,” Norling said. – Reuters

 ??  ?? Virtual reality technology gives viewers the perception of being physically close to the characters.
Virtual reality technology gives viewers the perception of being physically close to the characters.

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