Photo: Kogulanath Ayappan by pexels.
I Written By Anshika chauhan I
India continues to grapple with a deeply entrenched and evolving crisis human trafficking, particularly targeting girls and women. Despite strengthened laws, specialized enforcement units, and growing awareness, the scale and complexity of trafficking networks have made it one of the country’s most pressing human rights challenges in 2026.
Alarming Numbers Paint a Grim Picture
According to the latest consolidated data from the National Crime Records Bureau, India recorded 2,250 human trafficking cases in 2022, involving 6,036 identified victims. Of these, 2,878 were children, including 1,059 girls highlighting the disproportionate vulnerability of minors.
Trend analysis based on NCRB and allied agency estimates suggests that by 2025–2026, the actual number of victims annually may exceed 8,000–10,000, factoring in chronic under-reporting. Activists and civil society organizations argue that official statistics capture only a fraction of reality, with many cases remaining hidden due to fear, stigma, and systemic gaps in reporting.
Earlier data also revealed that in 2021, an average of eight children were trafficked every day, with minors comprising 44% of all victims a pattern that has shown little sign of decline.
Geographic Hotspots and Source Regions
Certain states continue to emerge as trafficking hubs:
• High-incidence states: West Bengal, Rajasthan, and Gujarat
• Source regions: Vulnerable areas like the Sundarbans and tribal belts in Jharkhand
In these regions, traffickers exploit poverty, limited education, and lack of employment opportunities, often luring girls with false promises of jobs, marriage, or a better life in urban centers.
Forms of Exploitation: A Multi-Layered Crisis
Human trafficking in India today spans multiple forms, many of which are increasingly interconnected:
1. Commercial Sexual Exploitation
Thousands of girls are trafficked annually into red-light districts in cities like Mumbai, Delhi, and Pune, where they are forced into prostitution under coercion and violence.
2. Bride Trafficking
A disturbing trend involves the trafficking of young girls from eastern states such as Bihar and West Bengal to regions with skewed sex ratios, including Haryana and Punjab. These girls are sold into forced marriages, often facing lifelong exploitation.
3. Digital Grooming and Exploitation
With the rapid expansion of internet access, traffickers are increasingly using platforms like WhatsApp, Instagram, and Snapchat to target and manipulate minors. Victims are often blackmailed using explicit content, trapping them in cycles of abuse.
4. Forced Labor and Domestic Servitude
Girls are also trafficked for unpaid or underpaid labor in households, construction sites, and informal sectors frequently transported across state borders or even trafficked internationally.
Drivers Behind the Crisis
Experts point to a convergence of socio-economic and environmental factors:
• Poverty: Nearly 85% of trafficked women come from economically disadvantaged backgrounds.
• Climate Vulnerability: Regions like the Sundarbans face repeated cyclones, displacing families and increasing susceptibility to traffickers.
• Social Marginalization: Tribal communities and remote populations remain disproportionately affected due to limited access to education, law enforcement, and welfare systems.
Legal Framework and Government Response
India has established a robust legal and institutional framework to combat trafficking:
• Section 143 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 criminalizes trafficking in all forms.
• The Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act specifically addresses sexual crimes against minors.
• Anti-Human Trafficking Units (AHTUs) operate across states to strengthen rescue and investigation efforts.
• Rehabilitation initiatives such as the Ujjawala Scheme focus on prevention, rescue, and reintegration.
• Additionally, agencies like the Central Bureau of Investigation maintain 24/7 helplines for reporting trafficking-related crimes.
The Road Ahead
While institutional efforts have expanded, experts stress that prevention remains the weakest link. Strengthening grassroots awareness, improving economic opportunities for vulnerable communities, and enhancing digital surveillance are critical steps forward.
As India advances into 2026, the fight against human trafficking demands not only stricter enforcement but also sustained societal commitment. Without addressing the root causes poverty, inequality, and gender imbalance the country risks allowing this silent crisis to persist in the shadows.





