Child Trafficking In India: Aftermath Effects and Challenges
Journal Title: IOSR Journal of Humanities and Social Science - Year 2018, Vol 23, Issue 3
Abstract
Trafficking of children is one of the gravest offensive crimes worldwide. Child trafficking is rapidly expanding in several forms of exploitation. United Nations statistics demonstrates that „every year more than millions people are traded and trafficked against their wish or forced to work into slavery, and majority of victims are counted as children‟. On other side, amongst all South Asian countries, India is rated as one of the fastest growing countries in the trafficking for modern sex slavery, where nearly 90 percent trafficking in human beings, specifically children and women for commercial sex tourism that happens within state boundaries. At the same time, trafficking in children occurs cross border also specifically from Nepal, Pakistan and Bangladesh. In India, countless number of children are trafficked not only for sex slave or prostitution but also for other forms of humiliation namely; agricultural activities, debt bondage, domestic service, forced and compulsory labor, begging, organ donate and false marriages etc. Child trafficking can be seen as violation of basic human rights, dignity and respect. This article highlights the major aftermath effects of the child trafficking. These effects include, physical, and mental health of the children and this paper describes challenges that constraint to prohibit the child trafficking in its all forms. This paper concludes with the necessity of social work implications to combat the modern slavery of the child trafficking.
Authors and Affiliations
Rashi .
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