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 Defenceless Jharkhandi / Adivasi Girls in Delhi





The capital has emerged India's child-trafficking hub with illegal agencies
selling thousands of minor girls into bonded labour.



Girls rescued from domestic labour in Delhi at their NGO-run home, Kishori
Niketan, in Ranchi. Families often refuse to take back the stigmatised girls




They are called "Delhi returns". At their impoverished villages in
Jharkhand, Orissa and Bengal, this ought to be a badge of honour, but not
for these girls. As they return home from Delhi, these already scarred girls
are stigmatised for life.



If they ever return, of course.



Aruna left her home in Ranchi three years ago, at the age of seven, to earn
a living in Delhi. Her mother Runia Orao hasn't heard from her since.



When a distraught Runia pooled her resources and arrived in the capital, she
found there were nine Arunas in the records of the placement agency that was
to find her daughter a job.



But none of them was the Aruna she longed to see.



Activists following the case have found out that the owner of the agency
that recruited Aruna had been jailed for raping three minors a few years
ago.



Aruna is just one of tens of thousands. According to data available with
social activist groups, 61,000 girls from Jharkhand and over 45,000 from
Bengal work in Delhi as domestic helps. More than half are minors.



All are victims of human trafficking by over 2,000 illegal placement
agencies operating in the capital, who send out scouts to faraway states to
prise young girls out of their homes. They are netted with promises of a
better life, often backed up with a small payment to their parents or a
bribe to an unscrupulous relative or neighbour.



In the capital, these girls spend years working virtually as bonded slaves
in various households with the agencies cornering most of their salary.
Duped, tortured, often sexually abused by the agency operators or employers,
the luckier ones are rescued by NGOs and put up at rehab homes.



Radha Kumari, 15, and Swati Kumari, 16, both from Jharkhand, say they were
"sold off" by their parents to placement agencies.



"I worked for two years in a Noida house but didn't get paid. They beat and
abused me regularly and took away all my money. Four months ago, I ran
away," said Radha, who is now in a care home in Ranchi and wants to become a
nurse.



These homes often turn a last stop for the Radhas and Swatis, with their
families unwilling to receive them back for fear of the stigma.



"I was eight when my parents sold me off. I worked in a house in Ashok Vihar
where they didn't give me any food and kept me locked up," Swati said.



"One day, I somehow managed to get to the station where some people handed
me over to these people (Bachpan Bachao Andolan, an NGO). My mother comes to
visit me but she doesn't take me with her."



The Delhi government has never been serious in implementing the law on child
labour, said Kailash Satyarthi of Bachpan Bachao Andolan (save childhood
movement) or BBA.



"That is why domestic child labour has risen in the city. The children are
being trafficked from Bengal, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh," Satyarthi said.



"All these agencies are illegal. Many of them register themselves as firms
or NGOs under the Societies Act. These kids are sexually abused and their
condition violates several laws including the Bonded Labour Act, and in many
cases the Child Labour and Juvenile Justice Act."



After the BBA filed a Right to Information application, the government
acknowledged that 99 placement agencies were illegally recruiting domestic
servants in south Delhi alone. At least half a dozen among them face
complaints of human trafficking in the guise of providing domestic helps.



Activists claim that in areas like Punjabi Baag, Rani Baag, Sultanpuri and
Golpuri in west Delhi, there are as many as 250 illegal placement agencies.
Sakurpur Basti in northwest Delhi has 50. One agency operates right opposite
a police station.



Operating without a licence, these agencies have to bribe local police.



"Their entire operation is so brazenly done, it's shameful. Can you believe
it, girls aged 10 to 12 are the most in demand as maids in Delhi?" an
activist said.



The agencies pay the families sums ranging from Rs 500 to a couple of
thousand and take an advance of Rs 10,000-12,000 from the prospective
employer. They hand the scout Rs 2,000 per girl and keep the rest. The girls
are not paid anything for the first 11 months of their job, but the agencies
don't always tell them that beforehand, the activist said.



"I wasn't paid for over 11 months. I worked almost 12-13 hours a day in a
house in south Delhi and at the end of a year got just Rs 3,000. When I
asked them (the agency), they said they had deducted Rs 4,000 as agency
fees, Rs 2,000 for medical bills and another Rs 2,000 because they put me up
before I got the job," said Savitri Lal, who has now returned home to
Calcutta. She said she never ran up any medical bills.



"Young maids who run away from their employers' homes become soft targets
for pimps unless we reach them first, because they are illiterate and cannot
earn their livelihood. Many girls we rescued were in late pregnancy or had
lost their mentally stability," said Sanjay Mishra, member of the Juvenile
Justice Board, Ranchi. Mishra oversees the running of Kishori Niketan, a
home for trafficked girls from Jharkhand.



One of the inmates, Shukla, was six months pregnant when she was rescued.
Her family refused to take her back. She is now piecing her life together
along with her one-and-a-half-year-old daughter Radhika.



Some girls have to risk running away because their families wash their hands
of them.



"I was lured by a girl in my village who took me to an agency in Delhi. I
went with her thinking that if I could earn, I would be able to help my
family," said Sanchi Kumari, 15, of Jharkhand.



When the beatings started she managed to call her relatives. "But they
wouldn't come and take me away. So I ran away and was rescued by activists.
Now, I am studying."



In Delhi, placement agencies get lucrative business because of the huge
demand for maids. One agency in Lado Sarai, southwest Delhi, placed 298
girls from Calcutta in various households in 2007. Its owner was a vegetable
vendor six years ago.



Recently, the Delhi government made it mandatory for all placement agencies
to be registered under the Shops and Establishment Act, but activists feel
the authorities need to earnestly implement the law.



"Besides, a monitoring mechanism should be created. Till then, human
trafficking to Delhi will continue," Satyarthi said.



*Maid to author*



The girls can take inspiration from Baby Halder, a maid in a Gurgaon house
who has risen to become an author. Her first book, Aalo Aandhari or A Life
Less Ordinary, has been translated into several languages. Abandoned by her
mother at seven, and taken out of school and married off by a negligent
father at 12, she left her abusive husband with her three children. As a
housemaid in Delhi, she hopped from one exploitative household to another
till her last employer, a professor, encouraged her to write. "I can never
forget my past life. I am glad that from the sorry depths of my life, I am
now in a position where I can inspire girls like me to think big. My
children are doing well in school, what else could I want?" Baby says



 August 18 , 2008 / The Telegraph





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