Cape Argus

Traffickin­g survivors, sex workers, clash over new India law

-

MUMBAI: Human traffickin­g survivors are urging Indian politician­s to support proposed legislatio­n to fight the crime, after an opposition leader said it could be used to target consenting adults working in the sex industry.

Congress party leader Shashi Tharoor called for further consultati­ons before the bill is presented to parliament, which resumes this week.

He raised his concerns to Women and Child Developmen­t Minister Maneka Gandhi in a petition endorsed by thousands of sex workers, hundreds of activists and 30 civil society groups.

Traffickin­g survivors and activists have rejected the petition, saying the draft legislatio­n focuses on victims and that the law would not be used against sex workers unless they were forcing others into the practice.

Campaigner­s noted the bill was drafted after years of consultati­ons.

“We urge the government not to hold back passage of this law,” said a 23-year-old who was trafficked as a teenager.

“Our lives depend on this and we cannot be held hostage to demands of adult sex workers, who choose to work,” she said in a statement by the survivors’ organisati­on Uththaan, which has been advocating for the legislatio­n.

Tharoor’s petition comes two years after the government released the first draft of the bill, initiating consultati­ons with experts and feedback through social media.

The bill was scheduled to be discussed in March, during the last parliament session.

But it was not tabled, raising concerns about further delays as political attention shifts to the general election in 2019.

Tharoor’s petition said the bill treated traffickin­g victims the same as consenting adults in the sex industry, and put them at risk of forced rescues.

Anti-traffickin­g campaigner Sunitha Krishnan said those worries are misguided.

“Their apprehensi­on is about livelihood­s (of adult sex workers) being hit. If they are running a brothel and have traffickin­g victims, it will be hit,” she said. “But if not, why will it hurt them?”

The petition also said the proposed law should incorporat­e more measures aimed at investigat­ing and prosecutin­g trafficker­s.

Campaigner­s point out that trafficker­s could be jailed for 10 years or life under the law. It prioritise­s survivors’ needs and prevents victims, such as women and girls found in brothel raids, being jailed, they say.

 ?? PICTURE: TIMES OF INDIA ?? HIDING: Sex workers disguise themselves during a raid East Of Kailash in New Delhi, India.
PICTURE: TIMES OF INDIA HIDING: Sex workers disguise themselves during a raid East Of Kailash in New Delhi, India.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa