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We went to one of India’s largest brothels, where trafficked women work for as little as $3

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New Delhi, India — A thin veil of pollution shimmers in the evening air above Garstin Bastion Road in India’s capital city. By day this road is home to a huge hardware market, but by night it becomes the capital’s largest red light district. Over 3,500 women and their children live in 90 dilapidated brothels here, just a few minutes drive from the Rajpath Marg, India’s equivalent of the Washington Mall.

Every day men, women, and children are transported across the subcontinent and forced into slave labor or sex work. According to last year’s Global Slavery Index, India has over 18 million people living in modern slavery, most of whom are forced to work in brutal farming and factory conditions. And though there are no official figures on how many become victims of sex trafficking, activistsestimate the number is somewhere between 3 million and 9 million.

In 2017 alone, almost 20,000 women and children were moved around India for this purpose, a 25 percent increase from the previous year according to government data, though the unofficial number is much higher. According to the Indian government, an average of 400 girls and women went missing every day in 2015 — and many are feared to have been forced into sex work.

On Garstin Bastion Road, the gritty details of India’s sex-slavery crisis is on full display.

Kotha 64

The hardware shops along the street close at night, but dark stairways fill with men queuing up to enter one of the many brothels. A pimp in a tattered shirt gestures at a doorway. “Young girl, Bhai (bro). Pretty. Good price, good price.”

Halfway down the road is Kotha 64 — the largest brothel. Inside rooms are filled with darkness and a smell of dirt and perfume lingers. The floors are littered with used condoms and cigarette butts. In the first room, all the windows are boarded up and several LED lights give the place a hospital-like glow. Around the sides of the room there are a dozen tiny compartments.

Twenty women sit on benches as men stand around ogling them. The average rate is 300 rupees ($5), but the women will be lucky if they see a fifth of the fee — many are trapped in lifelong debt to their owners and pimps. Local charities working to free women from the sex trade say that at least 90 percent of the women and girls here are victims of sex slavery.

Forced into bondage at a young age

Girls forced into the sex trade usually start at the age of 12 or 13. “Human trafficking dealers get good money,” explains Dipesh Tank, a project director at the Rescue Foundation. “You can buy a minor girl for 5,000 to 10,000 rupees ($75 to $150) in the north or in Nepal, and sell her in a metropolitan city for over 200,000 ($3,300). The younger the girl, the higher the price, especially if she’s a virgin.”

Once they’re in the hands of the pimps and traffickers there will be a so-called “breaking period” where the girls are often locked in a cell, starved, tortured, and raped. The pimps and madams often give the underage girls hormones like oxytocin or oradexon (cow steroids) so they’ll develop curves and bring in more customers.

Often, this process will happen in the brothels themselves. Walking down Kotha 64’s hallways, the twists and turns in the building’s design hint at hidden rooms. Bina Rani, the CEO of IPartner India, a charity funding anti sex trafficking campaigns, says that this is often where the children of trafficked women live. There are “hundreds of children hidden away,” Rani said.

Some small-scale charities are making inroads to help these women and children. The NGO Kat Katha has provided education to some of the children who live on GB Road and organized medical check-ups for the women there. But underfunding and intimidation remain huge problems for these small organizations, and without greater attention and government support, there’s only so much they can do.

Even when a girl is somehow rescued from this horrific trade, rehabilitation can take a lifetime. “We rescue loads of girls, but because of social stigma, many of their parents don’t want the rescued daughters back,” Tank explains.

Corruption and turning a blind eye

Despite the scale of the problem, convictions for human trafficking remain low — in 2014, there were only 100 convictions. “Interstate investigations never happen,” said Tank, “traffickers can just disappear across state lines.”

Although prostitution is not illegal in India, the activities that accompany it are, such as slavery, soliciting, pimping, and management of a brothel. The problem is well known, but politicians and police often appear unable or unwilling to address the issue.

According to local NGOs, police officers often make deals with brothel owners — they can make hundreds of thousands of rupees a month in bribes just for looking the other way and giving tips on the next raid.

Politicians aren’t much better, says Delhi’s high commissioner for women Swati Malilwal. “[GB Road] is running 3 kilometers from the parliament — there is a complicity, everybody, right from the top to the bottom,” Malilwal told VICE News. “The system is involved, otherwise a place like this would never exist. There’s an organized racket because on daily business we’re talking about a multi-million crore industry.”


In May 2016, India’s ministry for women and children unveiled the draft of a new anti-trafficking law. It was hailed as the first ever comprehensive attempt to tackle trafficking — modernizing a host of archaic laws which often see sex trafficking survivors treated as complicit criminals rather than as victims. But political intransigence and ideological division over the issue have meant the bill is yet to be implemented.

Will Brown is a freelance journalist working on development, politics and human rights issues. He has recently been researching sex trafficking networks and child labor in India. He tweets at @_will_brown.

https://news.vice.com/en_us/article/9kdjy3/indian-authorities-wont-help-millions-of-trafficked-women
 
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Sad .but problem is until India outlaws prostitution and demolishes these borthels this plague cant be controlled
 
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India is filthy and then this thread.
I think you have consumed your daily quota or is there still more ?
 
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Real face of "self proclaimed" super power. Women selling bodies for pity 3$ . It is reflection of Indian society in general. The paid Modi media will never show the real India.

And people wonder why India is unsafe for women? Uncivilized starving people fueled by hinduvata.

Their body. They right. What is your problem?

Sad .but problem is until India outlaws prostitution and demolishes these borthels this plague cant be controlled

Prostitution is legal but running brothels is illegal in India.

Everyone has a right to choose what is right for them.

Well, India is a morally bankrupt society.

Morality is over rated.

Even though India is our rival but my heart goes for those innocent girls who just like other girls definitely deserve a better life. I wish that I was able to do anything.

You can marry four of them.

And people wonder why India is unsafe for women? Uncivilized starving people fueled by hinduvata.

What is the link between Prostitution and rape or crime against women?

The problem is well known, but politicians and police often appear unable or unwilling to address the issue.

They are part of the problem not the solution.
 
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Their body. They right. What is your problem?



Prostitution is legal but running brothels is illegal in India.

Everyone has a right to choose what is right for them.



Morality is over rated.



You can marry four of them.



What is the link between Prostitution and rape or crime against women?



They are part of the problem not the solution.
The problem is majority of proustite r initially forced into it as told in this article and legal prostitution gives blanket to the traffickers its a joke that u allow prostitution but not brothels they would simply work in name of hotel and modeling agency and rape of girls will keep on going on industrial scale
 
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The problem is majority of proustite r initially forced into it as told in this article and legal prostitution gives blanket to the traffickers its a joke that u allow prostitution but not brothels they would simply work in name of hotel and modeling agency and rape of girls will keep on going on industrial scale

Even if prostitution is banned, trafficking will still continue. If girls are dumb enough to fall prey no one can help them.
 
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Even if prostitution is banned, trafficking will still continue. If girls are dumb enough to fall prey no one can help them.
But there will be a significant reduction and that would be still better then current situation as the article shows
 
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Abe yeh defence forum hai ya Dalalon ka forum hai? Kabhi Rape, Kabhi prostitution, kabhi toilet.....No wonder so many old and Notable members left PDF!:hitwall:
 
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But there will be a significant reduction and that would be still better then current situation as the article shows

Not really. You are focused on curing the symptom rather than the problem. Prostitution is not the problem at all. The problem is to do with forced human trafficking. This happens across the country too.


Human Trafficking
Tortured in the Middle East: The human trafficking nexus in Hyderabad
All the women are lured by the promise of easy money, only to realise once they reach their destination, that they have been 'sold off' as nothing more than domestic slaves.
  • TNM Staff
  • Sunday, September 30, 2018 - 15:00
Share @Facebook Share @twitter Share @Email Share @google+ Share @reddit


Hyd%20Saudi%20trafficking%20main_0.JPG

The slums in Hyderabad’s old city area are a fertile ground for agents, mostly men, who are on the lookout for vulnerable women, to trap into the massive human trafficking nexus that takes place in the city. The vulnerable women could include widows, women with alcoholic husbands, women with pending loans or even medical ailments.

These agents then recruit 'sub-agents', mostly women, whose job it is to convince the identified lady to hand over her documents and travel to the Middle East.

Government documents are prepared, including Aadhar cards, Voter ID cards, passports and a visa is issued, generally in Mumbai. From Mumbai, the women are flown to Dubai, where the immigration process is completed, before they are transported to their real destination.

All the women are lured by the promise of easy money, only to realise once they reach their destination, that they have been 'sold off' as nothing more than domestic slaves. The entire trafficking ring involves both foreign nationals and Indians living in Hyderabad and abroad.

India's Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) has laid down several strict guidelinesfor citizens who wish to travel to foreign countries for work.

For example, the 'khadama' visa (a visa for domestic help) has been banned for a few years now. This is where agents come in and exploit loopholes.

While the younger women are lured under promises of being hired as beauticians, the older women are usually told they have to work as nurses.

Besides physically and sexual assaulting the women, the employers also do not let them step out of the house. If the women manage to run away, a case of theft is filed and the victim often spends months in jail before she is rescued.

Though senior police officers have been working keenly on such cases, a lot of work is yet to be done as some victims allege that lower-level police officers often try to ‘settle’ cases between the agent and the families.

Watch the video below.



https://www.thenewsminute.com/article/tortured-middle-east-human-trafficking-nexus-hyderabad-89330
 
.
India is filthy and then this thread.
I think you have consumed your daily quota or is there still more ?

Frustrated poor people. Vent their frustration.

New Delhi, India — A thin veil of pollution shimmers in the evening air above Garstin Bastion Road in India’s capital city. By day this road is home to a huge hardware market, but by night it becomes the capital’s largest red light district. Over 3,500 women and their children live in 90 dilapidated brothels here, just a few minutes drive from the Rajpath Marg, India’s equivalent of the Washington Mall.

Every day men, women, and children are transported across the subcontinent and forced into slave labor or sex work. According to last year’s Global Slavery Index, India has over 18 million people living in modern slavery, most of whom are forced to work in brutal farming and factory conditions. And though there are no official figures on how many become victims of sex trafficking, activistsestimate the number is somewhere between 3 million and 9 million.

In 2017 alone, almost 20,000 women and children were moved around India for this purpose, a 25 percent increase from the previous year according to government data, though the unofficial number is much higher. According to the Indian government, an average of 400 girls and women went missing every day in 2015 — and many are feared to have been forced into sex work.

On Garstin Bastion Road, the gritty details of India’s sex-slavery crisis is on full display.

Kotha 64

The hardware shops along the street close at night, but dark stairways fill with men queuing up to enter one of the many brothels. A pimp in a tattered shirt gestures at a doorway. “Young girl, Bhai (bro). Pretty. Good price, good price.”

Halfway down the road is Kotha 64 — the largest brothel. Inside rooms are filled with darkness and a smell of dirt and perfume lingers. The floors are littered with used condoms and cigarette butts. In the first room, all the windows are boarded up and several LED lights give the place a hospital-like glow. Around the sides of the room there are a dozen tiny compartments.

Twenty women sit on benches as men stand around ogling them. The average rate is 300 rupees ($5), but the women will be lucky if they see a fifth of the fee — many are trapped in lifelong debt to their owners and pimps. Local charities working to free women from the sex trade say that at least 90 percent of the women and girls here are victims of sex slavery.

Forced into bondage at a young age

Girls forced into the sex trade usually start at the age of 12 or 13. “Human trafficking dealers get good money,” explains Dipesh Tank, a project director at the Rescue Foundation. “You can buy a minor girl for 5,000 to 10,000 rupees ($75 to $150) in the north or in Nepal, and sell her in a metropolitan city for over 200,000 ($3,300). The younger the girl, the higher the price, especially if she’s a virgin.”

Once they’re in the hands of the pimps and traffickers there will be a so-called “breaking period” where the girls are often locked in a cell, starved, tortured, and raped. The pimps and madams often give the underage girls hormones like oxytocin or oradexon (cow steroids) so they’ll develop curves and bring in more customers.

Often, this process will happen in the brothels themselves. Walking down Kotha 64’s hallways, the twists and turns in the building’s design hint at hidden rooms. Bina Rani, the CEO of IPartner India, a charity funding anti sex trafficking campaigns, says that this is often where the children of trafficked women live. There are “hundreds of children hidden away,” Rani said.

Some small-scale charities are making inroads to help these women and children. The NGO Kat Katha has provided education to some of the children who live on GB Road and organized medical check-ups for the women there. But underfunding and intimidation remain huge problems for these small organizations, and without greater attention and government support, there’s only so much they can do.

Even when a girl is somehow rescued from this horrific trade, rehabilitation can take a lifetime. “We rescue loads of girls, but because of social stigma, many of their parents don’t want the rescued daughters back,” Tank explains.

Corruption and turning a blind eye

Despite the scale of the problem, convictions for human trafficking remain low — in 2014, there were only 100 convictions. “Interstate investigations never happen,” said Tank, “traffickers can just disappear across state lines.”

Although prostitution is not illegal in India, the activities that accompany it are, such as slavery, soliciting, pimping, and management of a brothel. The problem is well known, but politicians and police often appear unable or unwilling to address the issue.

According to local NGOs, police officers often make deals with brothel owners — they can make hundreds of thousands of rupees a month in bribes just for looking the other way and giving tips on the next raid.

Politicians aren’t much better, says Delhi’s high commissioner for women Swati Malilwal. “[GB Road] is running 3 kilometers from the parliament — there is a complicity, everybody, right from the top to the bottom,” Malilwal told VICE News. “The system is involved, otherwise a place like this would never exist. There’s an organized racket because on daily business we’re talking about a multi-million crore industry.”


In May 2016, India’s ministry for women and children unveiled the draft of a new anti-trafficking law. It was hailed as the first ever comprehensive attempt to tackle trafficking — modernizing a host of archaic laws which often see sex trafficking survivors treated as complicit criminals rather than as victims. But political intransigence and ideological division over the issue have meant the bill is yet to be implemented.

Will Brown is a freelance journalist working on development, politics and human rights issues. He has recently been researching sex trafficking networks and child labor in India. He tweets at @_will_brown.

https://news.vice.com/en_us/article/9kdjy3/indian-authorities-wont-help-millions-of-trafficked-women

These you can call hiramandi of india.
 
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