KARACHI – Begging and sex work are what transgender people
in Pakistan too often end up doing. But
this also means that they are more likely to have information about the dark
world of child sex trafficking.
Bindya Rana had the idea of tapping into this connection to
find missing children.
“We are provided with pictures of the missing child, which
we pass on to the transgender people in the areas where they beg and
live," Rana explains, noting that some 2,000 transgender are on the case.
"We direct them to search, and if they get any information to let us
know.”
According to rights groups, 40,000 children go missing every
year in Karachi. Many are kidnapped and sold in the sex industry. This year
alone, the transgender activists have recovered more than 40 kidnapped or
missing children in the city.
Rana says it’s a very rewarding work. “A transgender who
helped discover a missing child started crying when the mother of that child
hugged and kissed her. She wasn't crying
for fear of the kidnappers, but was overwhelmed by the love and respect she got
for the first time in her life.”
Her team works in partnership with the Roshni Foundation, a
non-government group that helps find missing children. Program officer Muhammad
Ali says it’s a success.
“One of our transgender volunteers informed us that a
kidnapped girl was being kept at a brothel where she was being exploited,"
Ali recalled. "The transgender person asked us to protect her and not reveal
her identity. We went to that place with
the police and found not only that girl but three more girls aged between 12
and 14 who were being kept at the brothel.”
Careful eyes
But such success stories are rare. Fewer than 20% of
children who went missing were found last year.
The government says poverty and large families are part of
the problem. Local Minister for Social Welfare Rubina Qaimkhani wants to see
parents take better care of their children. “Parents must have vigilant eyes
for their children," she said. "If we work together we can solve this
problem.”
But there are also many children who don’t have parents
around to watch them, including those who have ended up at Edhi shelter for
homeless children, one of the largest such shelters in Pakistan.
Doctor Rehana, who runs Edhi, is impressed with the unlikely
program for transgender people get involved in finding missing children. “It’s
a positive idea," he said. "If we Pakistanis use our mind for such
positive ideas we can change a lot, but if we stayed on the negative path than
nothing is going to change here.”
Rana says the transgender activists in the program work on a
purely volunteer basis – they ask only for respect in return for their efforts.
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