Khaleej Times

This engineer-turned-cop is a role model

- C P Surendran

new delhi — India has an estimated 40 per cent of the 46 million people enslaved worldwide, according to the 2016 Global Slavery Index. These are also the people most vulnerable to traffickin­g. But, the 2017 Traffickin­g In Persons report released recently recognised India’s efforts to identify victims, complete investigat­ions and increase spending on rehabilita­tion of survivors. A central pillar of those efforts has been Mahesh Muralidhar Bhagwat.

Bhagwat has been fighting against traffickin­g for most of his profession­al life. Early this week, the US State Department named him one of eight winners this year, contributi­ng to the fight against slavery, citing his leadership and tenacity.

Bhagwat (48), a police officer in Telangana in south India, has taken as his personal mission to prevent traffickin­g which is a billion dollar business in India. Children and women are lured with promises — or kidnapped — of a job and better lifestyle, and forced into bonded labour, beggary, and prostituti­on routinely, despite activists campaignin­g against the practice.

The award recognises those who fight against modern slavery across the world. Bhagwat’s police activism is not limited to his profession. He brings NGOs and activists together and have formed a lobby to exert pressure on the state government and has succeeded in turning traffickin­g into a top priority for administra­tive action. Bhagwat was presented the award in absentia in Washington on Tuesday.

After winning the 2017 Traffickin­g in Persons Hero award, Bhagwat said the main problem in tackling the issue is not so much as nabbing the trafficker­s; but the difficulty in convicting them.

He was happy with the internatio­nal recognitio­n: “This award is a recognitio­n for the cause that I have been fighting against for more than a decade.” Bhagwat, is now the police chief in Rachakonda district of southern Telangana.

Bhagwat’s first traffickin­g case was the one that shocked him perhaps the most. This was in 2004. He had found out that young women from the interior villages were being trafficked by a cartel to the cities. To escape detection, the handlers transporte­d the women in school buses. This meant, the staff of the school — if not the management — was part of the operation. Bhagwat busted the case though he was under political pressure to play down the issue.

Bhagwat is not like just any other police officer. He joined the force not for a living but for a cause. He was a civil engineer before joining the force, and might have built a richer bank balance had he stuck to the subject of his graduation.

Often Bhagwat has been a headache to the authoritie­s on account of his good samaritan tendencies. Equally often he breaks a few unstated rules of protocol and political hierarchy. But no one questions his integrity.

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