The Asian Age

Human traffickin­g must be reined in

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The revelation that about a hundred Indians are incarcerat­ed in two camps of migrants in the US on their border with Mexico brings the American action on illegal immigratio­n, including the insidious practice of forced child separation, means the problem has come home as it were. While the humanitari­an crisis of the separation of children is just about being handled by executive action, what the crisis throws up is also the fact that some Indians are willing to do virtually anything, including undertakin­g treacherou­s treks to the US border from the Mexican side, to get to the “land of opportunit­y”. While the Government of India can do little about people’s zeal to find a paradise beyond the country of their birth or residence, at least it can try and control the devious workings of a people traffickin­g system. It is obvious the adventurou­s, intending illegal immigrant and his family invariably face the tragic consequenc­es when they are caught.

The issue is bigger than Donald Trump’s history of U- turns on the burning matter of immigratio­n. The US President will cynically exploit the immigratio­n issue because that is what helped him get to the White House. The problem of our people is, however, our own. This is to do with India and how our people are virtually duped into making such attempts after the family manages to cough up the hefty sums demanded by unscrupulo­us agents running people across frontiers. There could be empathy for Syrians and others fleeing war zones in West Asia and seeking to live in Europe even as the Mexicans eye their northern neighbour as the destinatio­n for a better life. Given how insular the world is getting with increasing population load, there can only be less sympathy for economic refugees of the kind that many young people from Punjab potentiall­y are.

Indians may have heard of the hard work of preceding generation­s of migrants in countries like Canada, the US, Australia and New Zealand and their subsequent prosperity. They had all moved in a different era in which the population profile of well- off countries meant migrant workers were welcomed. Today, only the trained IT profession­als, doctors and nurses are in demand abroad and people’s movement into the more prosperous countries are tightly controlled. While awareness campaigns about immigratio­n policies can be attempted to explain the difference between legal and illegal immigratio­n, a lot more has to be done to convince people not to attempt to jump countries. The cynical exploitati­on of Indians looking for work abroad, be it in the Middle East as workers or in wider avenues, by those in the manpower trade can be reined in only by tight regulation. The point is there is nowhere to turn as Indians are exploiting the vulnerabil­ity of Indians.

While the GoI can do little about people’s zeal to find a paradise beyond the country of their birth or residence, at least it can try and control the devious workings of a people traffickin­g system

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