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CA Topic

Girl Child Trafficking in India

Brief Context

Context Girl child trafficking remains one of the gravest human rights violations in India, and Bihar’s persistent struggle with poverty, migration, and porous borders has tragically made it a hotspot. Bihar’s Trafficking Crisis Bihar has become a trafficking hub due to poverty and social vulnerability, porous borders with Nepal, railway links to trafficking-prone States, and cultural exploitation (orchestra belt), especially in regions like Saran and Muzaffarpur. Bihar Police rescued 271 girls,

Source Content

Syllabus: GS2/Issues Related to Children; Issues Related to Women

Context

  • Girl child trafficking remains one of the gravest human rights violations in India, and Bihar’s persistent struggle with poverty, migration, and porous borders has tragically made it a hotspot.

Status of Human & Girl Child Trafficking

  • Human trafficking is one of the largest organised crimes worldwide.
  • According to the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) Data 2022:
    • India registered 2,250 cases of human trafficking, identifying 6,036 victims, of which 2,878 were children, including 1,059 girls.
      • On average, eight children were trafficked every day in 2021, with 44% of trafficking victims being minors.
  • Bihar and Rajasthan reported the highest number of child trafficking charge sheets between 2018 and 2022, with 1,848 and 2,711 respectively.

Bihar’s Trafficking Crisis

  • Bihar has become a trafficking hub due to poverty and social vulnerability, porous borders with Nepal, railway links to trafficking-prone States, and cultural exploitation (orchestra belt), especially in regions like Saran and Muzaffarpur.
  • Bihar Police rescued 271 girls, with 153 trafficked into orchestras and 118 into the flesh trade (June 2025).

Reasons Behind Trafficking (Root Causes)

  • Systemic Failure: Despite strong legislations in India conviction rates remain abysmal.
    • Cases are misfiled, often as kidnappings or missing persons, and Anti-Human Trafficking Units (AHTUs) are under-resourced.
    • Girls are sometimes sent back to families that sold them (Re-trafficking Risks).
  • Gender Discrimination: Girls are disproportionately targeted for sexual exploitation, domestic servitude, and forced marriage.
  • Demand for Cheap Labor and Sexual Exploitation: Industries and underground networks perpetuate exploitation for profit.
    • Orchestras continue to operate with impunity, even after repeated rescues.
  • Migration and Displacement: Natural disasters, conflict, and rural-urban migration increase vulnerability.
  • Cultural Practices: Traditions like Devadasi and Jogin systems have historically contributed to exploitation.

Legal & Institutional Frameworks in India

  • Constitutional Protections: Article 23 prohibits trafficking and forced labor.
    • Article 39(e)-(f) mandates the protection of children against exploitation.
  • Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act (ITPA), 1956: Criminalizes trafficking for commercial sexual exploitation.
  • POCSO Act, 2012: Protects children from sexual offenses.
  • Juvenile Justice Act, 2015: Provides care and protection for trafficked children.
  • Ujjawala Scheme: Focuses on prevention, rescue, rehabilitation, and reintegration of victims.
  • Integrated Child Protection Scheme (ICPS): Strengthens child protection infrastructure and services.
  • Project Jeevanjot-2 (Punjab): Introduced DNA testing to verify familial ties of children found begging, helping identify trafficking cases.
  • Child Welfare Infrastructure:
    • Childline 1098 helpline;
    • National and State Commissions for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR/SCPCR);
  • NGO Networks: Organizations like Bachpan Bachao Andolan, Praajwala, and Sanlaap lead on-ground efforts in rescue, rehabilitation, and reintegration.
  • Campaigns like Dear Men, a short film based on real-life rescues, aim to raise public awareness.

Way Forward: Prevention as Protection

  • Trafficking needs to be tackled at the source. It includes school monitoring of attendance; village registers tracking child migration; railway and transport vigilance; trained AHTU personnel; strict prohibition and prosecution of orchestras employing minors; state-supervised rehabilitation.
  • Prosecution as the Tipping Point: A recent report by the Centre for Legal Action and Behaviour Change (C-Lab) emphasizes that prosecution is key to stopping trafficking.
    • In collaboration with NGOs, 53,651 children were rescued, and legal action followed in each case — a clear indicator that justice deters crime.
  • PICKET Framework: To end child trafficking, India needs to adopt the PICKET strategy:
    • Policy – Clear laws banning child exploitation;
    • Institutions – Empowered systems for protection and justice;
    • Convergence – Coordination between departments and NGOs;
    • Knowledge – Awareness campaigns and intelligence sharing;
    • Economic Disruption – Make trafficking financially unviable;
    • Technology – Use digital tools for tracking and prevention;

Source: TH