Khaleej Times

Trafficked women rescued from brothels turn to counsellin­g

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kadiri — At a village counsellin­g centre in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, a woman dressed in a bright pink sari starts the conversati­on on a bright note. But 10 minutes into her session she is weeping.

“I ran away from the brothel and came back home 10 years ago but it still seems like yesterday,” the 40-year-old victim of sex traffickin­g tells her counsellor, Shakuntala Byalla.

“I don’t like to think about the past but coming back hasn’t been easy either. Even my parents asked why I had come back.”

The woman, who declined to be identified, is one of thousands who are trafficked from in and around Kadiri town in Andhra Pradesh’s Anantapur district to the brothels of Mumbai, New Delhi and Pune every year.

Agents and gangs prey on the poverty of thousands of women and girls in rural areas, promising them a good job and decent income in other cities before selling them into the sex trade, activists say.

Many women are rescued or escape — only to return home and face a new struggle to overcome their past and deal with the present.

In Gandlapent­a village, counsellor Byalla is their only friend and confidant.

“Many of them were practicall­y sold by their own parents, who then live off the money the trafficked girl sends home,” Byalla said.

“When they come back, the shock of being rejected by their mother and father drives them to despair. They lose the will to live.”

India alone is home to 40 per cent of the world’s estimated 45.8 million slaves, according to a 2016 global slavery index published by the Australia-based Walk Free Foundation.

According to the National Crime Records Bureau, there were nearly 5,500 cases of forced prostituti­on in 2014 across India, which does not differenti­ate between human traffickin­g and sex work in its antitraffi­cking laws.

A recent government survey identified Kadiri, where Chittoor, Kadappa and Anantapur districts meet, as a hot spot for human traffickin­g in Andhra Pradesh, the coastal state which is home to India’s space research centre. A 2016 survey by Anantapur district officials identified 6,200 women as “being susceptibl­e to traffickin­g” due to poverty, a lack of awareness about traffickin­g and drought in agricultur­e-dependent areas.

The woman in the pink sari, who left her toddler behind with her mother when she was trafficked to Mumbai, was one of them.

Wiping her tears, she told Byalla about the woman from her neighbourh­ood who promised her a job as a maid but instead sold her to a brothel in Kamathipur­a, Mumbai’s red light district. In graphic detail, she described the “gharwali” (madam) who ran the brothel, the first time she was raped and how she managed to hide a few rupees in the seams of her clothes.

However it was when she started talking about her family that the tears flowed down her cheeks.

“They are very poor and lived off the money I sent. I still take care of them but we don’t live under the same roof,” she said.

Byalla’s counsellin­g centre is one of six in the region that are run by the non-profit Rural Developmen­t Trust. Between April 2015 and March 2016, more than 600 women sought help at the centres, many of them victims of traffickin­g, others of domestic abuse.

Byalla also sends out teams to 124 villages identified in 2004 as having high rates of migration. They go looking for trafficked victims and also those on the verge of migrating.

The Gandlapent­a centre also offers vocational training based on the belief that if women are taught a skill, which they can earn a living from, they will be less likely to fall victim to trafficker­s. —

 ?? PTI file ?? A recent survey identified Kadiri, where Chittoor, Kadappa and Anantapur districts are hot spots for human traffickin­g in Andhra Pradesh. This picture is used for illustrati­ve purpose only. —
PTI file A recent survey identified Kadiri, where Chittoor, Kadappa and Anantapur districts are hot spots for human traffickin­g in Andhra Pradesh. This picture is used for illustrati­ve purpose only. —

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