Human sex trafficking remains one of the number one problems in India. No one knows exactly how many children are sold into the system, because there’s too many to count, and more and more are affected each day. Over 300 cases are reported involving human trafficking in southern Indian states a year. However, many cases go unreported. In four years, Indian states, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh have received over 4, 000 cases of reported human sex trafficking. 300 of these children, or “bonded” workers were rescued in 2013. It is believed that New Delhi is the center for human sex trafficking trade, prostitution, and forced labor and …show more content…
Not all of these women get justice. A fifteen-year-old girl was interviewed from the hospital, where her “employer” beaten her with a broom to the point where she had a black, bruised, eye and swollen lips, along with burn marks and scabs and an open wound in her skull that contained maggots. Cases like these make those wonder what other horrors could be taking place in India, and it makes awareness for the stop that needs to be put to it. Sexual trafficking, especially if forced, can leave these women with scars that can and cannot be seen. Victims often suffer from PTSD, anxiety, depression, and are at great risk for sexually transmitted diseases, especially HIV. Recently the India’s minister for women and children revealed the first anti-human trafficking law that would “treat survivors as victims in need of assistance and protection rather than as criminals”. Finally, steps are being taken to control the issue. But it leaves wonders as to when will the problem finally end, and if there will be a day where children and women no longer need to go missing from the families in hope for a better