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How Bihar's devastating floods open doors to child labour and sex trafficking networks

The stories are harrowing. Children collapse from exhaustion, surviving on two rotis a day. Those who resist are beaten. But the reach of traffickers extends beyond child labour.

July 28, 2025 / 14:00 IST
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Bihar floods

In Bihar, where annual floods wash away homes and livelihoods, another, more sinister devastation unfolds - human trafficking. As rivers breach their banks, leaving families destitute, traffickers swoop in, preying on the most vulnerable with false promises of jobs and security. What follows, as reported by TOI, is a life of exploitation, forced labour and for many, no way back.

For traffickers, natural disasters are an opportunity. Districts like Sitamarhi, Araria and Madhubani ravaged by floods year after year, become hunting grounds for traffickers to capitalise on desperation and displacement. Arriving with promises of food, shelter and work, they entice parents anxious to secure a future for their children. Desperate parents, with no crops or income, send their children away, hoping for a better future. However, these offers often become a one-way ticket to a world of exploitation. Many vanish into bonded labour, forced entertainment or worse.

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"Most of the boys I rescued were working 15-16 hours a day," Farooq Alam of Tatvasi Samaj Nyas was cited TOI. Many were from marginalised Musahar or minority communities, trapped in informal contracts with no escape.

Shovan Roy from Siktia village in Katihar was just 14 when floods destroyed his home. With his father dead and no income, his mother sent him to a bangle factory in Jaipur. "We were not children - we were machines made of flesh and blood," he said, as cited by TOI. Many like him report working from morning to night in cramped workshops, with their suffering overlooked and their childhoods stolen.