Several minors and other victims of human trafficking have been successfully rescued from the state by the Integrated Rehabilitation cum Resource Centre (IRRC), an initiative of the Jharkhand department of women and child development, which was established at the chief minister Hemant Soren’s proposal.
Based on paperwork found in their home, 19 girls were released after the IRRC, New Delhi, and Sahibganj Police apprehended two human traffickers.
Of them, five girls were older than eighteen, and fourteen were between the ages of twelve and fifteen. They are all inhabitants of the Sahibganj district of Jharkhand’s Borio block.
They carried out operations to liberate them from different parts of New Delhi.
The director of Jharkhand Bhawan in New Delhi, Virendra Kumar, as well as two regional NGOs, Mission Mukti Foundation and Rescue Foundation’s Akshay Pandey, provided assistance to Jharkhand Police.
The Borio Police in Jharkhand notified Nachiketa, the nodal officer of the Integrated Rehabilitation and Resource Centre in New Delhi, that a human trafficker had enticed multiple females and transported them to Delhi.
After phoning the local police station, two people smugglers were taken into custody based on the information provided by the police. At the smugglers’ home, a girl who had been transported to Delhi via human trafficking was discovered.
Sahibganj SP Kumar Gaurav was notified as soon as the human smugglers were discovered. He moved swiftly and dispatched a police squad to Delhi right away. Under the direction of Rajesh Kumar, the Borio Police arrived in Delhi and released the girls by conducting searches in different parts of the city using documents seized from the human traffickers’ home.
All will be brought before the Child Welfare Committees (CWC) in several Delhi districts, and following legal proceedings, the Jharkhand Women and Child Development Department will rehabilitate them and return them to their homes.
All districts have been given explicit instructions by the Jharkhand Women and Child Development Department to respond promptly in the event that any such cases are discovered. In addition, the Jharkhand government’s various schemes mandate that the District Social Welfare Officer and District Child Protection Officer of the affected district form a team, send them to New Delhi as soon as such cases are discovered, and rehabilitate the children safely in their homes. The advantage ought to go to them. They should also be constantly observed.