Human
trafficking in South Asia: Need to revise priorities
Human
Rights Features
Human
trafficking is big business. And not just for the traffickers. The United
States' Comprehensive Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act of 1999 gave a
fillip to international funding initiatives to tackle human trafficking,
a 150-year old problem in South Asia. The next three years saw a proliferation
of proposals, projects, and seminars. And funds, disbursed enthusiastically
but indiscriminately by international funding agencies. A number of
anti-trafficking "networks" emerged as part of an attempt
to link organisations across the South Asian region.
A
study of international funding programmes and anti-trafficking initiatives
of NGOs would make for a fascinating and lengthy report. A general review
of the domain however reveals that most anti-trafficking initiatives
by international funding agencies focus on activities such as awareness-building
among potential victims and communities and information exchanges. Others
support rescue and rehabilitation efforts, training and capacity-building
programmes. Few, however, have taken on the difficult but crucial task
of supporting efforts aimed at the apprehension and prosecution of traffickers.
The root causes of trafficking must undoubtedly be addressed. But, until
attempts are made to target the perpetrators and bring them to book,
the trade in human beings will continue.
Trafficking
persists because judicial and law enforcement institutions have failed
to systematically implement and enforce anti-trafficking laws effectively;
indeed, they have exacerbated the problem. Few traffickers are apprehended,
let alone prosecuted. Police collusion and bribery are often cited by
anti-trafficking activists as a major part of the problem. And, despite
the existence of a legal framework for combating trafficking networks,
the authorities in countries of origin as well as destination countries
lack both the capacity and the will to undertake the intensive investigatory
and prosecutorial work necessary to have a significant impact on trafficking
rings. The lack of sufficient cross-border cooperation compounds the
enforcement problem.
The
onus is clearly on States to ensure that their law enforcement agencies
are geared to tackle the problem. The thrust of civil society's efforts
needs to be on pressuring governments to take action. However, there
is a general reluctance on part of NGOs to engage with governments and
to make effective use of the national and international tools available.
Few activists are aware, for example, of the existence of the office
of the National Rapporteur on Trafficking, part of the anti-trafficking
initiatives of the National Human Rights Commission of Nepal. The first
rapporteur resigned, citing lack of support from the NHRC. This is where
NGOs could intervene, by monitoring the functioning of the existing
mechanisms and ensuring that the mandated tasks are carried out.
Existent
international instruments such as UN treaty bodies and special mechanisms
have been unequal to the task of monitoring anti-trafficking effects
by governments. A concerted effort to submit information to the special
mechanisms and to counter government claims made to human rights treaty
bodies would go a long way in pressuring governments to take cognisable
action.
International
donor agencies have been unimaginative and short-sighted in this regard.
This has unwisely shaped the activities of NGOs, which have focused
on post-trafficking mop-up operations such as rescue and rehabilitation
of victims, and a host of "information exchanges" and "policy
dialogues".
It
is not as if the policy seminars have resulted in concrete action on
the ground. There was little informed NGO input prior to the drafting
of the SAARC Convention Against Trafficking in 1999. The result was
a weak, inadequate and moralistic Convention. First, its understanding
of trafficking is confined to trafficking of women and children for
the purpose of prostitution. It ignores the fact that women and children
are often trafficked for use as domestic servants and other kinds of
labour. Victims of trafficking include men (and boys) who are used as
domestic servants, camel jockeys etc. Its language includes words such
as "evil" and "honour of human beings", terms that
reflect a moralistic approach, and which are marginal to the effective
addressing of the issue.
The
Convention fails to draw the attention of SAARC members to the various
useful international initiatives and instruments with regard to trafficking.
Apart from the few instruments it does cite, no mention is made of the
ILO Conventions, the International Convention on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights, the International Convention on Elimination of All
Forms of Discrimination Against Women and a host of other instruments.
The listing must necessarily be exhaustive if the SAARC Convention is
to be a comprehensive and effective guide for governments in the region.
NGOs
have also failed where follow-up is concerned. There has been little
domestic pressure on the countries that are yet to ratify the Convention.
Efforts to prod States towards evolving tangible policies against trafficking
have likewise been myopic and delusional. A host of "outcomes'
have emerged from policy dialogues, most of them imprecise and badly
formulated. The ones that do provide a realistic set of proposals have
not managed to reach the desks of policymakers for want of effective
lobbying and advocacy.
Attempts
to influence the SAARC process have been futile, and will remain so,
thanks to the 'carnival' approach to lobbying and advocacy. Visits by
'citizens' groups' armed with 'People's Pledges' are a good exercise
in solidarity-building, but are largely symbolic, the equivalent of
a candlelight vigil, in itself not a bad thing.
However,
if the aim is to influence the SAARC agenda and get governments to take
a fresh look at the documents they draft, any alternative text would
have to land neatly on the delegates' tables. This would require intensive
lobbying, first at the national level in each country long before meetings
and summits are held, and later in the run-up to the meetings. Government
officials have to be contacted, and alternative texts not fuzzy wish
lists submitted to them in advance for their perusal. Press conferences
must be called, not during the government meetings when the agenda has
already been decided, but prior to the meetings when governments are
in the process of giving shape to their positions on various issues.
It
is not just governments that lack the will to make a difference. For
many in the non-governmental community, it is international funding
that decides their priorities for them. Funding agencies, for their
part, are yet to draw any conclusions from their "learning process".
In any case, it will soon be time to move on to the next big item on
the funding agenda.
Human
Rights Features, an initiative of SAHRDC, Delhi, is an independent,
objective and analytical attempt to look comprehensively at issues behind
the headlines from a human rights perspective.