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News Update received
by email from the author.
On Monday, 21 August, Seelu (main character in story) was
at New Delhi station and walked right into the very woman
who had trafficked her. She immediately rang Shakti Vahini
(an NGO active in anti-trafficking, HIV prevention and health
outreach) and managed to keep the woman (Rukmani) distracted
for an hour by feigning interest in buying girls herself,
before Shakti Vahini arrived and an arrest was made. Shakti
Vahini told me she handled the situation with great presence
of mind. The incident was on that night's TV news and in the
next day's newspapers.
http://www.hindu.com/2006/08/22/stories/2006082222330300.htm
The case against Rukmani and the brothel to which the girl
was sold is very strong as Shakti Vahini has a lot of supporting
evidence.
But the girl's nayika (controller inside the brothel) has
apparently since
died, so action will probably be taken against the brothel
owner. But the big scoop is that a diary was found on Rukmani
with details of all sorts of contacts in Delhi's and Mumbai's
red light areas to whom she has allegedly confessed selling
girls. Because the Indian Home Minister's constituency includes
the district in Maharastra where this woman operates, Shakti
Vahini is now writing to urge him to launch a full scale investigation
of all the girls that have disappeared from that area, on
the strength of this find. So this chance encounter may come
to have very big ramifications.
Beginning of original article
India's looming HIV disaster terrifies the rest of the world,
and its potential to outpace Africa as the world's largest
reservoir of the virus has brought out the big money to contain
it. World Bank funds are flowing into HIV-prevention programmes.
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has committed $200 million
to galvanize leadership at the institutional level and change
behaviour among high-risk groups. The Clinton Foundation is
assisting India's National AIDS Control Organization to train
large numbers of doctors in the basics of HIV medicine and
broaden access to treatment.
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| A
commercial sex worker in Mumbai, India © WHO photo/P.
Virot |
And change is happening. Programmes to distribute free antiretroviral
(ARV) drugs have been established and safe sex campaigns are
gradually entrenching condom use in Delhi's GB Road and Mumbai's
Kamatipura red-light districts-notorious epicentres of infection.
But the spread of HIV is not merely a practical problem that
enough condoms, drugs and doctors can bring under control.
For underlying this epidemic is a phenomenon of greater magnitude
and complexity which threatens to overwhelm the impact the
Clinton and Gates Foundations' combined expenditures might
make. This is India's vast, murky, semi-criminalized, semi-tolerated
trafficking of girls from economically marginalized States
into coerced marriages, forced labour and prostitution.
Trafficking is an issue that struggles for attention in India's
overburdened social policy arena. While HIV/AIDS funding is
becoming something of a "cash cow" for better positioned
agencies in the field, according to a Times of India article,
trafficking is an area of under-resourcing and government
inertia. Yet, to the extent that trafficking is a direct contributor
to the pattern of infection, HIV-control strategies require
a distinct set of policy measures targeting its underpinning
organizational structures. Identifying those targets and how
to act on them has relevance for curbing the link between
HIV and trafficking, not just in India but elsewhere in the
Asian region, particularly in Myanmar, Thailand and Cambodia,
where there are substantial movements of young women from
circumstances of poverty into prostitution. How this transfer
is effected may vary from country to country, but the mechanisms
at work in India are far more widespread, recurring in neighbouring
countries as well.
Take the case of Seelu, a girl in her early twenties who
had been trafficked four years earlier to Delhi from Maharashtra.
She had fallen ill with tuberculosis and was being monitored
by Shakti Vahini, a non-governmental organization (NGO) active
in anti-trafficking, HIV prevention and health outreach on
GB Road. A seemingly unremarkable business precinct specializing
in machine tools, pumps and presses, up to 3,000 prostitutes
live in overwhelming monotony in this small area, with little
hope of a future once they can no longer compete with younger
recruits to the cycle of sexual super-exploitation and infection.
The Delhi Government's latest survey puts the HIV-infection
rate on GB Road at 12 per cent, considered to be an underestimate
by many.
The girls are highly controlled through fear. "They
are told these NGO people who come to the brothels can't be
trusted, that if they go away with them they will just be
sold again", Shakti Vahini's Director Ravi Kant explained
the reluctance of trafficking victims to seek help. Outsiders
are viewed with deep suspicion, the police, with outright
apprehension. "They know the police take bribes from
the brothel owners. They are told if they complain they will
be taken to the thana police station and raped as punishment
for making trouble." Seelu was particularly well placed
to doubt the police: her brothel owner had had a long-standing
affair with a local police commander.
"Once the girls enter the brothels, they are sold several
times over", Ravi is talking about their udhar debt,
which increases exponentially as ownership changes hands-it's
a contrived inflation. With little prospect of paying off,
the girls are locked into years of servitude. To unravel the
money nexus is to begin to comprehend the vested interests
feeding off this system that block effective control of trafficking.
After haggling down the starting price, a customer finds himself
importuned over again for baksheesh, but the baksheesh is
about all the girl will keep for herself. The rest of the
money is entered into meticulously kept chits held against
each girl's name: half will go to the owner, who has accounts
to settle with building owners and hafta to buy off police
and other officials to disregard the illegalities of the trade;
the other half goes to the nayika.
It took Shakti Vahini a long time to identify Shobha, Seelu's
nayika. Seelu kept her connection to Shobha well concealed
for good reason: she was a figure of real power. A short,
fat woman with gold jewellery and palpable air of command,
fussed over by half a dozen girls, she took Seelu's money,
beat her and never allowed her unaccompanied outside the brothel.
Shobha was the key to understanding what Seelu was up against.
The nayika, a term equivalent to boss lady, occupies a role
absolutely pivotal to the brothel system. Usually older ex-prostitutes,
they have survived by saving money and gradually acquiring
girls of their own. Several nayikas might rent space in one
brothel; the organizational effect of this is akin to cell
structures used in spy networks to isolate individual operatives
and frustrate outside penetration. The girls are not only
physically and psychologically cut off from the outside world,
but they are also divided amongst themselves by the pressure
of competition with girls working for other nayikas.
Nayikas are also instigators and the end point behind the
flow of trafficked girls, employing their connections to bring
girls from their home regions. Both Seelu and Shobha were
from the same town in the border region between Maharastra
and Andrah Pradesh, a major supply zone for trafficked girls.
Nayikas pay the go-betweens, the dalaals who know where the
vulnerable families are-whose crops have failed, whose breadwinner
has died-and inveigle daughters away from gullible parents
and arrange transport to Delhi. Little room for compassion
exists in the relation of a nayika to the girls she controls.
A veteran of a brutalizing system, she knows all their motives
and evasions; her livelihood depends on working the girls
relentlessly. It is a relationship that mocks calls to legalize
prostitution in order to regularize their rights. Few of the
attributes of a regular employment relationship can exist
in this environment. As Seelu put it, "our lives are
like of animals".
"If a girl stops earning, she won't last long in there."
Ravi heard of one girl, who after breaking a leg was simply
dumped on the street until well enough to resume work. Asked
if she felt any obligation for the costs of her tuberculosis
treatment, Seelu was scathing: "Shobha paid that money
only because I made money for her. Girls who get sick and
are not making money are left in a back room to die."
This callousness is responsible for much of the HIV problem.
"Meeri majboori", Seelu answered flatly when asked
about her inconsistent use of condoms-an expression that conveys
compulsion, having no option and by which she meant that Shobha
would not tolerate displeasing customers who wanted to dispense
with them. And if their nayikas won't educate them and back
them up, where else are intimidated, barely literate young
girls going to find the capacity to insist on safe sex with
ignorant or uncaring customers?
Seelu had an even more compelling reason to obey Shobha.
"A Nayika will work a girl for a few years when she is
young and making a lot of money, then let her get pregnant
and take the child and keep it. Once she has control of the
child, the mother cannot run away." Seelu's two children
were born before she was trafficked, in a young marriage that
failed because her husband drank and beat her. Going against
the tradition of arranged marriages had alienated her family,
who were too poor anyway to be much support when her love-marriage
foundered. So when Seelu was approached for a job as a domestic
servant in Delhi, she had already fulfilled three of the disposing
conditions for trafficking. "There are four main reasons
girls get drawn into prostitution", Ravi explained, "poverty,
domestic violence, divorce and desire for easy money. Poverty
is by far the biggest cause of vulnerability." Within
moments of arriving at New Delhi station, Seelu was driven
straight to GB Road and her children taken from her. For a
long time she held out, but alone in a vast impersonal city,
speaking little Hindi, with no money and no way of finding
her children, Seelu was utterly trapped.
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| Getting
the message out: Shakti Vahini's health outreach workers
provide HIV-prevention education to sex workers and their
customers. Photo/Shakti Vahini |
The Government's stance against trafficking is ineffectual
and confused at the highest levels. The Immoral Traffic Prevention
Act (ITPA)-India's principal legal response dating back to
1956-prohibits trafficking in persons, criminalizes sexual
exploitation and enhances penalties for offences involving
minors. Prosecutions of traffickers are rare, however. In
the assessment of the United States State Department's Trafficking
in Persons Report, the administrative machinery to support
ITPA languishes. Police simply do not utilize all the ITPA
provisions, diminishing the penalties against traffickers
and brothel owners.
Trafficking is inherently an interstate phenomenon, but efforts
to investigate trafficking across State borders are encumbered
by lack of coordination among States' police departments.
But where the subversion of government anti-trafficking measures
particularly occurs is with the endemic complicity of lower-level
law enforcement officials-the local police's accommodations
with dalaals, border guards facilitating the interstate movement
of victims, and police officers tipping off nayikas to impending
raids for underage girls.
Investigations by Shakti Vahini, the anti-trafficking NGO,
into the disappearance of an underage Assamese girl trafficked
to Haryana reveals why the local police steadfastly declined
to take action against the dalaal despite evidence of at least
11 girls trafficked by her. Lured herself from Assam on a
pretext of marriage to a rich Haryana landowner, but sold
instead to a landless pauper, she had turned this dismal experience
into a skill of sorts, enticing other poor girls from her
home region. The acceptance of bride-buying in Haryana and
the large numbers of men ready to pay for brides made her
services as a dalaal an avenue to social acceptability and
income. However, her customers complained she was blackmailing
them with threats to expose underage marriages-money she insisted
was being siphoned by the police threatening to arrest her.
This dalaal was effectively an agent of rent-seeking behaviour
by the police.
Shakti Vahini's tactic was to work on Seelu's awareness.
"Sometimes girls rebel against their nayikas. Once they
find out about their rights, they begin to realize they can
fight back." It was a confrontation with Shobha over
seeing her children more often that pushed her over the edge.
Seelu one day slipped away to one of GB Road's ubiquitous
phone stalls and called Ravi: "I have left that place."
It took Shakti Vahini another month to track down her children
through their contacts. Girls like Seelu enter the world of
trafficking through an act of casual deceit and, because of
their social marginality and tenuous formal identification,
exist in a zone of structural invisibility to the authorities,
an indifference compounded by lax law enforcement that permits
the trafficking market to flourish.
Constraining the market makers is essential to limit HIV
propagating through the pathways of the human trafficking
trade. What Seelu's story illustrates is the urgency for incisive
action aimed specifically at breaking the nayika system in
the brothels, the nexus between nayikas and dalaals, and the
complicity of local authorities. This needs to be made the
focus of intervention right across the Asian region wherever
naïve girls like Seelu take that fateful first step.
Postscript: Had Seelu not called Ravi, she would
probably now be dead. Seelu was subsequently diagnosed as
HIV-positive. Her tuberculosis-the biggest killer of HIV-positive
people in India-was resurgent because of the drug-resistant
strains and insalubrious living conditions on GB Road. She
is receiving free ARV drugs through the Delhi State AIDS Control
programme and TB treatment through NGO Shakti Vahini, where
Seelu is being trained to work on its sex worker outreach
programmes as an HIV-role model and educator.
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