Remember ME - You Me and Dementia

Monday, October 6, 2008

Bangalore's tragedy of migrant children

THEY ARE the children of a lesser God. For Bangalore city does not deem them to be its own. In fact, born elsewhere they migrate to the city in pursuit of a livelihood, only to be ruthlessly gobbled up by unscrupulous traffickers for whom they are just another reserve army for all kinds of exploitation.

Not less than 400 children, mostly girls, migrate to the city every year and are ready-made fodder for human trafficking. The cases of trafficking in migrant children has been steadily increasing by the year. Almost 70 per cent of these child migrants are trafficked in one form or another. The bulk of trafficked children are migrant labourers. While most trafficked children are girls, increasingly, boys are being recruited in the sex industry, besides for menial labour.

According to a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), working among migrant children, most of the these children who come to the city belong to lower echelons of the society; lower castes like Schedule castes and Schedule tribes, minority religious and ethnic groups and broken families. "Most children trafficked are from rural areas. But trafficking from other urban centres is also on the rise," reveals CC Poulose, state convener, Campaign Against Child Trafficking, Karnataka.

Child migrants turning traffickers

A member of the child welfare committee says most of these children come to the city from neighbouring states like Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu. Children do come from the north as well, mostly Delhi, Chandigarh, Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal. He observes that migrant children end up in the city on their own or sent by their parents or guardians. Once in the city, the search for subsistence leads them to the traffickers who haunt railway stations and bus-stands looking for their quarry. Children do end up in the traffickers’ net in their home towns or villages as well.

A social worker with a NGO that has rescued several of these children, says trafficking can take different forms. He observes that novel types of trafficking have emerged all over and in fact human trafficking has become the fastest growing business in organised crime.

Children are mostly trafficked for labour. "Trafficking children for the purposes of domestic servitude, bonded labour or work in hazardous industries, factories, restaurants and construction sites has grown. The number is growing as children are perceived as commodities prone to easy manipulation, nimble in work and can be exploited for a longer period," he says.

The mushrooming of unlicensed and unregistered orphanages, faith based welfare/charity homes have opened up a whole new avenue for trafficking of children, avers this social worker. Children are sold and relinquished at these institutions, some are picked up if found abandoned or missing, some are voluntarily handed over by parents.

Pay according to age

Trafficked migrant children are paid according to their age.

By Nina C George

Source: http://www.merinews.com/catFull.jsp?articleID=143653&catID=2&category=India





Forget yourself for others, and others will never forget you.

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