Times of Suriname

The pandemic has created a second crisis in India — the rise of child traffickin­g

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INDIA One evening in August, a 14-year-old boy snuck out of his home and boarded a private bus to travel from his village in Bihar to Jaipur, a chaotic, crowded and historical city 800 miles away in India’s Rajasthan state.

He and his friends had been given 500 rupees (about $7) by a man in their village to “go on vacation” in Jaipur, said the boy, who CNN is calling Mujeeb because Indian law forbids naming suspected victims of child traffickin­g. As the bus entered Jaipur, it was intercepte­d by police.

The man was arrested and charged under India’s child traffickin­g laws, along with two other suspects. Nineteen children, including Mujeeb, were rescued. Jaipur police said they were likely being taken to bangle factories to be sold as cheap labor. In India children are allowed to work from the age of 14, but only in familyrela­ted businesses and never in hazardous conditions. But the country’s economy has been hit hard by the coronaviru­spandemic and many have lost their jobs, leading some families to allow their children to work to bring in anything they can.

Making colored lac bangles like those sold in Jaipur is hot and dangerous work, requiring the manipulati­on of lacquer melted over burning coal. Bangle manufactur­ing is on the list of industries that aren’t allowed to employ children under 18. In recent years, India has strengthen­ed its laws on child labor, but in the past six months with Covid19 taking a toll on the economy -- that work has started to unravel.

“Children have never faced such crisis,” said 2014 Nobel Peace Prize winner Kailash

Satyarthi, whose organizati­on Bachpan Bachao Andolan (Save the Childhood Movement) works to protect vulnerable children. “This is not simply the health crisis or economic crisis. This is the crisis of justice, of humanity, of childhood, of the future of an entire generation.” When India went into a strict lockdown in March, schools and workplaces closed. Millions of children were deprived of the midday meal they used to receive at school and many people lost their jobs. Trafficker­s have exploited the situation by targeting desperate families, activists said.

Between April and September, 1,127 children suspected of being trafficked were rescued across India and 86 alleged trafficker­s were arrested, according to Bachpan Bachao Andolan. Most of the children came from rural areas of poorer states, such as Jharkhand or Bihar. Pramila Kumari, the chairwoman of Bihar’s Commission For Protection Of Child Rights, said the government commission had received more complaints of traffickin­g during the pandemic. (CNN)

 ??  ?? Mujeeb (not his real name) was rescued in a child traffickin­g raid in Jaipur, India, on August 21. (Photo:CNN)
Mujeeb (not his real name) was rescued in a child traffickin­g raid in Jaipur, India, on August 21. (Photo:CNN)

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