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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • Sam Eaton, PRI’s The World

    Human Traffickers Follow Floods in India, But Local Girls Are Fighting Back

    September 17, 2015 By Wilson Center Staff

    The original version of this article, by Sam Eaton, appeared on PRI’s The World.

    The Sundarbans – a collection of densely populated islands in India’s sprawling Ganges Delta – are so remote that the only way to get there is by boat. But human traffickers still manage to get in, and that’s left many families with missing daughters.

    The combined effects of climate change and extreme poverty make it easier to lure women and children into forced prostitution, marriage, and labor. Trafficking in this part of northeastern India’s West Bengal has gotten so bad, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime reports a 25-fold increase in missing women and children since 2001. It’s the worst rate in the country.

    I visited a small village called Dholkhali a few miles from India’s watery eastern border with Bangladesh. Life here has always been a struggle.

    But now constant flooding from rising seas is making things much worse.

    “They are at the mercy of God, mercy of environment, or you can say climate,” says Save the Children India’s Sunil Banra.

    Continue reading on PRI.

    Sources: PRI, UN Office on Drugs and Crime.

    Video: PRI.

    Topics: climate change, education, environment, flooding, GBV, gender, India, land, livelihoods, media, oceans, population, poverty, security, South Asia, youth

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