Guest guest Posted May 29, 2006 Report Share Posted May 29, 2006 Prevention of Trafficking and the Care and Support of Trafficked Persons (Policy analysis Documentation of current intervention models Community-based study of trafficking) In recent years, millions of women and girls have been trafficked across borders and within countries. The global trafficking industry generates an estimated five to seven billion U.S. dollars each year, more than the profits generated by the arms and narcotics trades (Widgren 1994). Over the last decade, the growing trafficking problem in South Asia has been recognized. Nepal and Bangladesh have been designated as " sending " countries or countries of origin in the regional web of trafficking. India and Pakistan are usually referred to as countries of " transit " or " destination. " Girls and women are trafficked within country boundaries, to other countries within the region, and across regions and continents beyond South Asia. The problem is particularly acute in Nepal, one of the least developed countries of the world. This agrarian nation lacks sufficient economic capital, infrastructure, and developed human resources. Ninety percent of its 21 million inhabitants rely on subsistence agriculture. Adult literacy is as low as 23 percent for females and 57 percent for males. Infant and maternal mortality rates are among the highest in the world. Historically, economic pressures have created a high level of migration in search of sustainable livelihood options outside Nepal. That migration level is escalating, particularly among men and women of prime productive and reproductive age in certain districts (Sanghera 2000). The effort to abolish trafficking in Nepal intensified after a multi-party democracy was established in 19901. At that time, trafficking of women and girls was identified as a priority issue 2. Within five years, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and community-based organizations (CBOs) began to address and combat the problem through expanded social, cultural, and economic programs. The international donor community, including the United Nations, bilateral and multilateral donors, increased funding for many social issues that had been relegated to the background, including issues related to women, children, bonded labor and human rights. His Majesty's Government of Nepal (HMG/N) established the Ministry of Women, Children and Social Welfare (MOWCSW), and began to formulate national policies and plans to integrate women and children into the national development process. A watershed event occurred in February 1996 when the Indian government tried to forcibly repatriate two hundred Nepali women from brothels in Mumbai. The government of Nepal initially refused to repatriate these " rescued " women. The emergency was somewhat diffused when a group of seven Kathmandu-based NGOs intervened, organizing repatriation of the victims and their subsequent care (ABC Nepal 1996; Pradhan 1996). This event drew considerable media attention, especially when a number of girls were forcibly tested for HIV - and found positive. Challenged by the immense need of these victims, many NGOs developed anti-trafficking programs, attracting considerable support from international donor agencies. Awareness of the HIV pandemic added a sense of urgency, since the social and economic processes underlying trafficking are in many ways similar to those fueling the spread of HIV (AIDS Action 1998; UNDP 2000). In 1997, Nepal's Ministry of Women, Children and Social Welfare formed a National Task Force on Trafficking, with support from the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the International Labor Organization (ILO). Under this initiative, District Task Forces were established in 26 districts of Nepal, and a National Policy and Plan of Action to Combat Trafficking were formulated. In 1998, an inter- agency United Nations Task Force on Trafficking was set up in Nepal, under the coordination of the United Nations Development Programme. In March 1999, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) Trafficking Program identified Nepal as one of the key countries for intervention, and organized two national workshops. Currently, pilot projects have been initiated in cooperation with the United Nations Task Force. The High Commissioner is also examining the South Asian Association for Regional ation (SAARC) Draft Convention on Trafficking from the standpoint of human rights. The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women selected Nepal as a focal country for a report on trafficking submitted to the Human Rights Commission in April 2000. http://www.traffickingandhiv.org/Resource%20Center/af_pop_council_2001__preven.p\ df __________________ " Dr. Avnish Jolly " e-mail: <avnishjolly@...> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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