Child trafficking in India

Why in News: The Just Rights for Children (JRC) network filed a petition in the Patna High Court demanding urgent action against trafficking of minor girls into orchestra groups. The court recognised it as a “serious issue” and directed the Bihar government to act without delay.

Human Trafficking: Definition

Human trafficking refers to the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring, or receipt of individuals by means such as:

  • Force
  • Threats
  • Coercion
  • Deception

The primary goal behind these actions is exploitation of the victim.

Forms of Exploitation

Human trafficking involves a wide range of exploitative practices, including:

  • Sexual exploitation and prostitution
  • Forced labor
  • Slavery or practices similar to slavery
  • Involuntary servitude
  • Organ trafficking

Statistics about Child Trafficking in India

C-Lab Report: The Power of Prosecution

Findings:

  • Covered 24 States
  • With law enforcement, 53,651 children were rescued in 27,320 raids
  • Legal action was taken in every case
  • Nearly 90% were engaged in hazardous forms of child labour

NCRB data (2022): 2,878 children trafficked, including 1,059 girls

Bihar Case

  • Until June this year( 2025) 271 girls rescued by Bihar Police 
  • Between March and June, JRC and police rescued 116 girls from orchestra groups

According to ILO and UNICEF (2024):

  • 138 million children involved in child labour
  • Around 54 million in hazardous work

Major Reasons for Child Trafficking in India

1. Demand for Cheap Labor & Sexual Exploitation

  • High demand for children in agriculture, construction, domestic work, and commercial sex trade fuels trafficking.

2. Social Inequality & Discrimination

  • Marginalized communities, especially those facing caste or gender-based discrimination, are more vulnerable.

3. Poverty & Lack of Livelihood

  • Economic desperation drives families to unknowingly hand over their children to traffickers promising a better future.

4. Illiteracy & Lack of Awareness

  • Low education levels and ignorance about trafficking risks make individuals easy targets.

5. Cultural & Traditional Practices

  • In some regions, children—especially girls—are trafficked under the guise of customs like Jogin and Devadasi, where they are dedicated to deities and exploited.

6. Criminal Profiteering

  • Child trafficking is the third most lucrative criminal industry globally (after drugs and arms), due to high profits and low risk for traffickers.

Why Bihar? — A Hotspot for Trafficking: Bihar’s rise as a major trafficking destination is driven by

  • Absence of regulatory oversight
  • Social acceptance of commodifying girls

Geographical vulnerability:

  • Porous Nepal border
  • Strong railway connectivity with trafficking-prone states: West Bengal, Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Assam, Uttar Pradesh

In states like West Bengal: 

  • Cultural aspirations like music and dance are exploited by traffickers. They lure girls with false promises of money, marriage, and fame.

Inside the ‘Orchestra Belt’: In districts like Saran, Gopalganj, Muzaffarpur, Rohtas, and West Champaran

  • Girls as young as 12 are sold to orchestras for as little as ₹10,000
  • They are presented on stage as performers, but in truth, they were victims of trafficking and sexual abuse.

Key Laws Against Child Trafficking in India

1. POCSO Act, 2012

  • Protects children (<18 years) from sexual abuse, harassment, and pornography.
  • Defines offenses like penetrative sexual assault and sexual harassment.
  • Provides child-friendly procedures for reporting and trials.
  • Special Courts and Public Prosecutors ensure speedy justice.

2. Bonded Labor System (Abolition) Act, 1976

  • Prohibits bonded labor, a common trafficking form.
  • Declares bonded labor agreements illegal and penalizes offenders.

3. Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act, 1956 (ITPA)

  • Criminalizes trafficking for prostitution.
  • Focuses on rescue, rehabilitation, and repatriation of victims.

4. Juvenile Justice Act, 2015

  • Protects and rehabilitates children in need and conflict with law.
  • Includes measures to prevent trafficking and aid rescued children.

5. Child and Adolescent Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act

6. Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita provisions

How the System Fails

  • Most cases are filed as missing persons or kidnappings
  • Conviction rates remain abysmal
  • Anti-Human Trafficking Units (AHTUs) are under-resourced
  • Interstate investigations fail due to jurisdictional confusion and bureaucracy
  • After rescue, girls are sent back to the same families that sold them

Steps That Must Be Taken

1. Prevention Where Trafficking Begins

  • Schools must monitor attendance
  • If a child is missing for weeks, it should trigger alerts
  • Panchayats must maintain migration registers
  • Villages must be made accountable — someone always knows

2. Parental Awareness

  • Parents must be informed about the real dangers behind false promises

3. Transport Vigilance

  • RPF is already monitoring rail corridors and conducting awareness drives
  • This must extend to: Bus routes, local terminals, and private carriers
  • Transport staff must be trained to spot trafficking

4. Strengthen AHTUs( Anti Human Trafficking Units)

  • Must have full-time, trained officers

Officers should:

  • Coordinate across states
  • Track trafficking networks
  • Follow each case from rescue to prosecution
  • They must be held accountable

What Should Be Done About the Orchestras?

  • Immediate and total ban on employment of minors
  • Identify, map, and regulate these groups
  • Seal premises where girls are confined
  • Prosecute owners, landlords, organisers
  • Attach their assets

Labour Department must be directed to:

  • Inspect, report, and act
  • Prosecution should be time-bound
  • Rehabilitation must be state-supervised and long-term
  • Children must not be sent back to abusive homes
  • Victim compensation schemes must be strictly enforced

A Strategy for Prevention: PICKET

To end trafficking, we need a strategy rooted in PICKET:

P – Policy

  • Enforce strong laws against child labour and trafficking
  • Ensure strict penalties for violator

I – Institutions

  • Strengthen institutions like Child Welfare Committees, AHTUs

C – Convergence

  • Enhance coordination between police, NGOs, child protection units
  • Use digital platforms for integrated action

K – Knowledge

  • Incorporate survivor feedback into policies
  • Promote local awareness and community vigilance

E – Economic Tools

  • Target the money trail to make trafficking unprofitable
  • Offer alternative livelihoods to at-risk communities

T – Technology

  • Use data analytics, heat maps to identify trafficking hotspots
  • Enable real-time inter-state information sharing.

Conclusion: 

The only way to prevent the next girl from being trafficked is to dismantle the system that enables it. The longer we wait, the more we lose.

GS I – Indian Society:

  • Vulnerable sections: issues related to women and children

GS II – Governance & Social Justice:

  • Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections

Q. “Despite multiple laws and schemes, girl child trafficking continues to plague Indian society.” Examine the causes and suggest a multi-pronged strategy to tackle the issue.

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