Radio hosts highlight human trafficking
More than 60% of the 23,117 victims rescued were children
With human trafficking on the rise in India, some radio hosts are using their programmes to raise awareness and help listeners spot traffickers.
In the Indian capital, New Delhi, radio host Ginnie Mahajan will talk trafficking on her award-winning show Suno Na Dilli (Listen Delhi) this weekend.
“We want Delhi to know that many of these girls working in their houses are reported missing by their parents,” she said.
“We need Delhi to know that girls are being forced into this trade.” Human trafficking in India rose by almost 20 per cent in 2016 against the previous year, Indian government data shows. More than 60 per cent of the 23,117 victims rescued were children. Forty-five per cent of victims were trafficked for the purposes of forced labour and 33 per cent for sexual exploitation, according to the data.
“If we only checked details of the women around whom our lives and kitchens revolve we could actually stop the crime,” Mahajan told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone from Delhi.
Radio has become an important tool in spreading awareness, campaigners say.
“It lets people know what is out there, the sheer horror of such a crime and how close to home it is,” said Adrian Phillips of anti-trafficking charity Justice and Care, which collaborates with radio stations.
While Mahajan’s show reaches urban Indians in the capital, a community radio station in the southern state of Karnataka recently went on air with a special programme devoted to human trafficking.
Keerti S. Chougala, a host on Nammura Banuli (Our Village Radio), said she was aiming to educate her nearly 400,000 listeners on the impact of the crime, as well as how to spot traffickers and report cases.
“We wanted to tell women and girls in the region about this in a simple way and raise awareness,” Chougala said.
Run by charity Women’s Welfare Society, the show is broadcast across more than 400 villages in Belgavi district.
Radio host