| Source: Al Jazeera | 
An investigation into the trafficking of Nepalese children to work in Indian circuses
People and Power Last Modified: 06 Sep 2011 14:27
In the border district of Hetauda, in southern Nepal, child trafficking is rife and the lack of border controls makes India an easy destination. For decades, Nepali children, mostly girls, have been sought by Indian circuses for their fair skin and beauty.
Often sold to traffickers by their parents, the children are enticed with stories of beautiful new clothes, a glamorous and exciting life, the chance of an education and a regular wage. Children, sometimes as young as five years old, have been taken and, in some cases, never seen again. Sold for as little as 1,000 rupees ($13), the families rarely receive the promised wage. Once in the circuses, these children often live in squalor and are never allowed to leave the circus compound. They are routinely beaten in order to teach them the difficult and dangerous tricks, and sexual abuse is commonplace. In effect, these children have been totally at the mercy of circus management who treat them as they please.*
In  2002, this scandal was exposed by a Nepalese children's charity, the  Esther Benjamins Memorial Foundation (EBMF), which runs a children's  refuge in Kathmandu. With police support, the EBMF started carrying out  surprise raids on circuses to rescue these highly vulnerable and at risk  children.
To date more than 300 Nepalese children have been  rescued by the EBMF and, where possible, returned to their families.  Those at risk of being re-trafficked or whose families are too poor to  support them are given a place to live at the trusts' refuge in  Kathmandu.
The refuge is run by Shailaja CM and is home to 122  children, half of whom are from circuses. Shailaja heads the rescue  operations and also tracks down the Nepalese traffickers who sell the  children to the circuses. Many of these traffickers are now serving long  jail sentences.
Through this relentless work, conditions in  circuses are improving. But there are thought to be more than 100  circuses operating in India and only 12 of these are registered with the  Indian Circus Federation - a non-governmental body that ensure  standards and good practice. This lack of regulation makes circuses  extremely difficult to monitor, and it is thought that there could be  between 1,000 and 2,000 children working inside circuses today.
Some  of the bigger Indian circuses are suspected of having links with other  businesses, such as gambling and gun running. As a result they can hold  great power within the states where they operate, even on a political  level, and have been known to collude with local government officials to  organise their protection in the case of a rescue operation.
Their  wealth and power have made it very difficult for Shailaja and the EBMF  team to take any action against them. In the past, on attempted rescue  operations in some of these larger circuses, they have been faced with  guns and received death threats.
But in April 2011, an amendment  was made to the Juvenile Justice Act, making it strictly illegal for  anybody under the age of 18 to work or train within circuses. With this  amendment in place, the EBMF is now planning a new phase of raids that  will target these larger, more powerful circuses first.
This film  follows Shailaja and the EBMF team on their first rescue operation  since this amendment was passed. They set off from Nepal to raid a large  circus operating in the state of Uttarakhand in northern India which is  suspected of using child performers, but as filmmaker Sky Neal finds  out there is still a very long way to go before child labour and  trafficking into Indian circuses is brought to an end.
* This statement does not apply to all circuses in India. 
 
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