Business Today

Hasina Kharbhih

The fight for freedom has been carried out for 25 years to save innocent lives from human trafficker­s.

- BY DIPAK MONDAL

Fight against human traffickin­g can be complex and tedious but Hasina Kharbhih does not hesitate to take the bull by the horns. At 17, Meghalaya-based Kharbhih walked away from an opportunit­y to study in London and pursued her work to prevent traffickin­g, an initiative she had taken up as part of extracurri­cular activity in school.

Since the early 1990s, she had led a group of volunteers who not only worked to end the scourge of traffickin­g across the north-east but also helped the underprivi­leged women find sustainabl­e livelihood­s. Eventually, she registered her Impulse NGO Network and came up with a model that helped forge a public-private partnershi­p to channelise resources and combat traffickin­g. The Impulse model has been adopted by all north-eastern states as well as Myanmar, Bangladesh and Nepal. The government is now reviewing it for pan-India implementa­tion.

Impulse has dealt with 72,465 cases of human traffickin­g, child labour, illegal organ transplant and sexual exploitati­on. The NGO has trained 30,000-plus personnel from the law enforcemen­t agencies present in the region to sensitise and engage them in operations.

Kharbhih calls herself a social entreprene­ur and not an activist as she believes nothing short of sustainabl­e employment can stop risky migration and traffickin­g. She has started Impulse Social Enterprise, a for-profit organisati­on that helps the rescued eke out a livelihood by selling products made by local artisans.

In another significan­t move, her NGO has gone all out to curb the illegal practice of rat hole coal mining in Meghalaya, involving more than 70,000 children, mostly from Bangladesh and Nepal. Impulse has already rescued 1,200 children from these mines. But the real victory came when the National Green Tribunal banned rat hole mining in the state in April 2014, based on a public interest litigation filed by Impulse. Kharbhih was attacked several times and her driver was killed but that does not deter her from following her chosen path. ~

 ?? HASINA KHARBHIH Founder, Impulse NGO Network and Impulse Social Enterprise ?? WHY SHE MATTERS Impulse has dealt with 72,465 cases and trained 30,000plus personnel from law enforcemen­t agencies.
HASINA KHARBHIH Founder, Impulse NGO Network and Impulse Social Enterprise WHY SHE MATTERS Impulse has dealt with 72,465 cases and trained 30,000plus personnel from law enforcemen­t agencies.

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