Latest modern slavery fight updates - FreedomUnited.org

Mumbai Red-Light Districts Go Underground

  • Published on
    January 26, 2016
  • News Source Image
  • Category:
Hero Banner

Mumbai red-light districts are being pushed out of the traditional areas and underground.  As a result, social workers want to see efforts that ensure the workers lives are protected…

This article reports that these neighborhoods in Mumbai are some of the top destinations in India for trafficked women. Once in decrepit brothels around the Kamathipura and Falkland Road areas in South Mumbai, but now over the last decade, the commercial areas for sex have moved closer to the suburbs–Vashi, Bhiwandi and Bhandup. Rape cases have jumped 390 percent in four years.  Higher real estate values have driven the business from their traditional locale in the Mumbai red-light areas.

Salilja Mehta with a non-profit named Dasra explains, “The entire modus operandi of the commercial sex industry is changing.  “It’s become less institutionalised, less formal, and is much more underhand and subtle now.”  The women–and often children too–are brought from surrounding states.  Many come from other nearby countries like Nepal and Bangladesh, having been promised good jobs in retail.  Mumbai has long attracted migrant workers who are searching for jobs to improve their lives.

Along with the migrants came traffickers. Most women and children are brought from other states and from neighbouring countries including Nepal and Bangladesh, under the guise of securing a well-paid job in a home or retail establishment. Instead, many are trafficked into sex work fronted by salons and massage parlours, or forced into manual labour.

The Global Slavery Index reports that about 36 million people in the world are entrapped in slavery.  Half of them are in India.

A field officer for IJM, International Justice Mission says, “Mumbai’s commercial-sex industry has gone from being quite a public, overt operation to a private, covert business.  The nature of the violence against these girls and women is different now, and harder to observe. It is also very hard to track and bring perpetrators to justice, because even the victims don’t quite know who’s the trafficker, who’s the pimp.”

To read the entire article, click on the link below.

View Article on Daily Mail

Subscribe

Freedom United is interested in hearing from our community and welcomes relevant, informed comments, advice, and insights that advance the conversation around our campaigns and advocacy. We value inclusivity and respect within our community. To be approved, your comments should be civil.

stop icon A few things we do not tolerate: comments that promote discrimination, prejudice, racism, or xenophobia, as well as personal attacks or profanity. We screen submissions in order to create a space where the entire Freedom United community feels safe to express and exchange thoughtful opinions.

Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

This week

From modern slavery to a normal life: Loretta’s story

What began as an invitation to work as a caregiver for four children living in the U.K. turned into what Loretta now knows as a form of modern slavery. Luckily Loretta was brave enough to find a way out and she shared her story of survival in a recent interview with the BBC. “When we got to airport, her behavior changed...” Loretta was working at an IVF clinic in Nigeria when a client approached her with an offer to move with them to the U.K. and

| Thursday May 2, 2024

Read more