Khaleej Times

Dogs, pimp patrols guard trafficked girls

- Reuters

chennai — Indian police have raided brothels guarded by dogs in the Telangana, arresting 35 people on charges of sex traffickin­g girls as young as 13, investigat­ors said on Monday.

Thirty women and girls were rescued in the overnight raids on March 1 and 2 in Medak district, in what police described as a “breakthrou­gh” in cracking sex traffickin­g networks.

“The brothels were guarded by big dogs, including Great Danes and Dobermans, making access very difficult,” Soumya Mishra of the Telangana criminal investigat­ions department.

“It took us two months to set up the operations as the brothel keepers had hired young boys to patrol the neighbourh­ood on bikes and tip them off on police

It took us two months to set up the operations as the brothel keepers had hired young boys to patrol the neighbourh­ood on bikes and tip them off on police raids Soumya Mishra, CID

raids.” Of an estimated 20 million sex workers in India, 16 million women and girls are victims of sex traffickin­g, according to non-government­al organisati­ons working in the country. In Telangana, over 500 cases of sex traffickin­g were registered between 2015 and 2016, and nearly 600 trafficker­s arrested, Mishra told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Last week’s raids have raised concerns over the number of young girls from poor economic background­s and broken homes being trapped in the trade, campaigner­s said.

The illegal brothels were being run from 35 houses in the Japthi Shivnoor village, with the owners living on the premises and the trafficked women housed in cramped rooms and forced to take on up to 10 clients a day. The trafficker­s charged around Rs500 ($7) for 10 minutes, but did not pay the victims any money, police said.

“During the raids we found lots of unused condoms hidden in rice sacks and also seized over 400,000 rupees ($6,000) in cash,” Mishra said.

“If we hadn’t raided the brothels, one of the girls who was very sick when we found her would have died,” she said.

The suspects, including a woman thought to be the kingpin of the operation, have been charged under anti-traffickin­g laws. —

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