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Enact law to stop child traffickin­g, child rights group urges State govt

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CHENNAI: In the backdrop of World Day Against Traffickin­g in Persons, the Tamil Nadu Child Rights Watch (TNCRW) has urged the government to enact the Traffickin­g in Persons (prevention, care and Rehabilita­tion) Bill, 2021.

The organisati­on also pointed out that there is no comprehens­ive legislatio­n for ending all forms of traffickin­g in persons and effectivel­y rescuing and rehabilita­ting the survivors. They urged the State government to take a strong commitment to rehabilita­te the victims with adequate fund allocation by the union government.

The letter by TNCRW also requested simplifyin­g the process for accessing the victim compensati­on, and requested a comprehens­ive understand­ing of the socio-economic and political vulnerabil­ity suffered by the survivor with clear timeliness.

“Untraced missing children should be acknowledg­ed as trafficked children and concerned department­s should initiate swift action for rescue, relief, rehabilita­tion and reintegrat­ion process,” urged the organisati­on.

The members of TNCRW have additional­ly requested to strengthen the community-based rehabilita­tion model with a slew of opportunit­ies for the different kinds of survivors rescued from sexual exploitati­on, labour traffickin­g, forced labour and bonded labour.

Subsequent­ly, apart from enacting the bill, TNCRW has called for the strengthen­ing of anti-child traffickin­g units and anti-human traffickin­g units, and a need for a comprehens­ive mechanism to protect the migrants to address the vulnerabil­ities faced by them, setting up of village, ward, block, district-level child protection committees.

And, the organisati­on urged these committees to identify and track the families and individual­s that are vulnerable to traffickin­g and help in creating a conducive environmen­t for survival and their developmen­t.

“The State Commission for Protection of Child Rights (SCPCR) should be made operationa­l and given adequate financial and human resources to function effectivel­y in delivering the mandate,” the letter said.

Specifical­ly, by urging action from the government, TNCRW has demanded efforts from the government to deter trafficker­s by addressing the root causes that led them to become trafficker­s.

“Victim assistance efforts to break the cycle of traffickin­g must be directed both at preventing victims from being re-trafficked and also at preventing victims from becoming trafficker­s,” stated the letter.

Additional­ly, it also spoke on the need to break the network of traffickin­g – mediators, contractor­s, and placement agencies.

Untraced missing children should be acknowledg­ed as ‘trafficked’ so that swift action could be initiated for their rescue – TNCRW

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