'We have rescued 26 children from
the clutches of human traffickers in the past 20 days'
Child
victims of the Nepal earthquake as young as eight are being rescued from people traffickers amid
fears they will be sold into the sex trade.
Young
survivors of the devastation are being targeted for work in sweatshops and
brothels, according to campaigners.
Authorities
in India
now claim to have rescued 26 children pushed into slave labour work.
The 7.8-magnitude quake, which killed more than 8,600 people, destroyed rural areas and left
hundreds of thousands homeless.
It is
reported that parents from poor villages in northern India,
who had been working as migrant labourers in Nepal, are being convinced by
traffickers posing as aid workers that their children will be given well-paid,
comfortable jobs.
The
children are in fact being taken to a bag factory in Mumbai.
Last week
28 child labourers were rescued from a garment factory in the north-western
city of Ludhiana
where they were being paid around 150 ruprees (£1.50) a week to stich T-shirts.
“We have
rescued 26 children from the clutches of human traffickers in the past 20 days
and sent them to rehabilitation centres,” said Sanjeev Kumar, a senior labour
official in Bihar’s East Champaran district.
“Following
the Nepal
disaster, the fear of children and women falling prey to the human trafficker
gangs has increased manifold and so we are keeping a strict vigil along the
Indo-Nepal border to prevent such happenings.”
A Nepalese woman cradles her child after the quake |
The news comes just
weeks after campaigners said they had noticed an increase in suspected trafficking at the Nepalese border with India.
“Girls are
at high risk of trafficking and sexual abuse, they have to be protected,”
Anuradha Koirala, the founder of Maiti Nepal,
an anti-trafficking organisation, said.
She said
her organisation had increased its monitoring operations on the border with India.
Women and
girls have long been targeted in the Himalayan nation, with the UN estimating
that up to 15,000 a year are trafficked to brothels abroad, mainly to India,
but also as far as South Korea.
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