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This documentary exposes sex trafficking in India, a billion-dollar industry

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Commercial sex trafficking in India was worth $32 billion in 2016, when digital media company Culture Machine’s creative head, Akanksha Seda, stumbled on this statistic. “I was in disbelief; I thought it was a typo. We got in touch with organisations to verify it, and it turned out to be true. That number is probably higher today,” says Seda. She decided to do something about it, and enlisted National Award-winning lm-makers Avinash Roy and Jasmine Kaur Roy to the effort.

Akansha-Seda-Amoli.jpg


Akanksha Seda: Creative Head, Culture Machine
Avinash-Roy.jpg
Avinash Roy, Filmmaker
Jasmine-Kaur-Roy.jpg
Jasmine Kaur, Filmmaker
After two years and countless interviews with survivors and families of victims across West Bengal, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra, Avinash and Jasmine made the documentary Amoli, which released on May 7 on Culture Machine’s YouTube channels (Being Indian for Hindi, Blush for English, Chutney for Tamil, and Viva for Telugu). It also aired on YouTube and Facebook in Bengali, Marathi and Kannada, all in an attempt to help spread the word in areas that are worst hit.

The 30-minute film based on sex trafficking in India follows the story of the titular girl from Siliguri in West Bengal, who went missing in 2013 at the age of 15, and was never found. Through her journey, it sheds light on the workings of the sex trade industry, including how it targets girls from low-income households and lures them in with the promise of gainful employment. “The trade is about supply and demand. And the demand for minors fuels the industry,” adds Avinash. “A lot of them can’t return home or get jobs because of the stigma—some survivors have been in NGO safe houses for over a decade,” says Jasmine.

Watching them narrate their realities behind blurred faces is excruciating, even though the dialogue and conversation is unnervingly transactional—from brothel owners talking prices, to prepubescent girls describing forced BDSM. Despite the soul-stirring melodies by indie songwriter and producer Tajdar Junaid, the end result is a bleak, chilling portrayal of the trade and its victims. “This film is about stoking public compassion and inspiring individual citizens to act,” says Seda. And act, we must.

DID YOU KNOW?

1. On an average, 40 girls are coerced into prostitution everyday in India.

2. Before sending her to the final brothel, a trafficker often beats and abuses her to command a 20-percent premium for a 'broken-in' girl.

3. The purchase price of a virgin minor, between 11 and 14, ranges from Rs 3 lakh to Rs 5 lakh.

 
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Very sad if we don't act and curb these human trafficking syndicates who prey on children and economically vulnerable people. In 70 years we have failed to uplift 300 millions who are still languishing at the bottom. These are huge numbers and scope of poverty alleviation programs is limited by resources.
 
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Commercial sex trafficking in India was worth $32 billion in 2016, when digital media company Culture Machine’s creative head, Akanksha Seda, stumbled on this statistic. “I was in disbelief; I thought it was a typo. We got in touch with organisations to verify it, and it turned out to be true. That number is probably higher today,” says Seda. She decided to do something about it, and enlisted National Award-winning lm-makers Avinash Roy and Jasmine Kaur Roy to the effort.

Akansha-Seda-Amoli.jpg


Akanksha Seda: Creative Head, Culture Machine
Avinash-Roy.jpg
Avinash Roy, Filmmaker
Jasmine-Kaur-Roy.jpg
Jasmine Kaur, Filmmaker
After two years and countless interviews with survivors and families of victims across West Bengal, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra, Avinash and Jasmine made the documentary Amoli, which released on May 7 on Culture Machine’s YouTube channels (Being Indian for Hindi, Blush for English, Chutney for Tamil, and Viva for Telugu). It also aired on YouTube and Facebook in Bengali, Marathi and Kannada, all in an attempt to help spread the word in areas that are worst hit.

The 30-minute film based on sex trafficking in India follows the story of the titular girl from Siliguri in West Bengal, who went missing in 2013 at the age of 15, and was never found. Through her journey, it sheds light on the workings of the sex trade industry, including how it targets girls from low-income households and lures them in with the promise of gainful employment. “The trade is about supply and demand. And the demand for minors fuels the industry,” adds Avinash. “A lot of them can’t return home or get jobs because of the stigma—some survivors have been in NGO safe houses for over a decade,” says Jasmine.

Watching them narrate their realities behind blurred faces is excruciating, even though the dialogue and conversation is unnervingly transactional—from brothel owners talking prices, to prepubescent girls describing forced BDSM. Despite the soul-stirring melodies by indie songwriter and producer Tajdar Junaid, the end result is a bleak, chilling portrayal of the trade and its victims. “This film is about stoking public compassion and inspiring individual citizens to act,” says Seda. And act, we must.

DID YOU KNOW?

1. On an average, 40 girls are coerced into prostitution everyday in India.

2. Before sending her to the final brothel, a trafficker often beats and abuses her to command a 20-percent premium for a 'broken-in' girl.

3. The purchase price of a virgin minor, between 11 and 14, ranges from Rs 3 lakh to Rs 5 lakh.


No western media ever spoted talking about it.
 
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Very sad if we don't act and curb these human trafficking syndicates who prey on children and economically vulnerable people. In 70 years we have failed to uplift 300 millions who are still languishing at the bottom. These are huge numbers and scope of poverty alleviation programs is limited by resources.
It is one of the most painful documentaries ihave seen ,when i shared it even tho ihadnt watched it, shared it to create general awareness because similar things in a different way might be happening in pakistan.

The case where girls own Taya gave her hormonal injections at age of 12-13 to prematurely mature her in order to sell her to sex market is gut wrenchingly sick and the fact that he did actually sell his own niece to sex market is extremely horrible and beyond words.

Its a painful watch but good tool to create awareness in south asian region.
Even more imp to watch it because one would get awareness regarding rescuing such victims.
 
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Human are the worst of the animal kingdom
 
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Human are the worst of the animal kingdom

Many are worse.... Animals act on instinct, yet the Lord gave us reasoning to be above them but yet look at what many so called humans do.

Commercial sex trafficking in India was worth $32 billion in 2016, when digital media company Culture Machine’s creative head, Akanksha Seda, stumbled on this statistic. “I was in disbelief; I thought it was a typo. We got in touch with organisations to verify it, and it turned out to be true. That number is probably higher today,” says Seda. She decided to do something about it, and enlisted National Award-winning lm-makers Avinash Roy and Jasmine Kaur Roy to the effort.

Akansha-Seda-Amoli.jpg


Akanksha Seda: Creative Head, Culture Machine
Avinash-Roy.jpg
Avinash Roy, Filmmaker
Jasmine-Kaur-Roy.jpg
Jasmine Kaur, Filmmaker
After two years and countless interviews with survivors and families of victims across West Bengal, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra, Avinash and Jasmine made the documentary Amoli, which released on May 7 on Culture Machine’s YouTube channels (Being Indian for Hindi, Blush for English, Chutney for Tamil, and Viva for Telugu). It also aired on YouTube and Facebook in Bengali, Marathi and Kannada, all in an attempt to help spread the word in areas that are worst hit.

The 30-minute film based on sex trafficking in India follows the story of the titular girl from Siliguri in West Bengal, who went missing in 2013 at the age of 15, and was never found. Through her journey, it sheds light on the workings of the sex trade industry, including how it targets girls from low-income households and lures them in with the promise of gainful employment. “The trade is about supply and demand. And the demand for minors fuels the industry,” adds Avinash. “A lot of them can’t return home or get jobs because of the stigma—some survivors have been in NGO safe houses for over a decade,” says Jasmine.

Watching them narrate their realities behind blurred faces is excruciating, even though the dialogue and conversation is unnervingly transactional—from brothel owners talking prices, to prepubescent girls describing forced BDSM. Despite the soul-stirring melodies by indie songwriter and producer Tajdar Junaid, the end result is a bleak, chilling portrayal of the trade and its victims. “This film is about stoking public compassion and inspiring individual citizens to act,” says Seda. And act, we must.

DID YOU KNOW?

1. On an average, 40 girls are coerced into prostitution everyday in India.

2. Before sending her to the final brothel, a trafficker often beats and abuses her to command a 20-percent premium for a 'broken-in' girl.

3. The purchase price of a virgin minor, between 11 and 14, ranges from Rs 3 lakh to Rs 5 lakh.


Poor girls, I wish the campaigners and the Indian police the best in taking these people down.
 
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sex trafficking is global problem but most of child trafficking cases in India come from Assam, west bengal. haryana and Bihar etc so they badly need to fix these areas

main-qimg-d3fec9e9849d55c004c0ad4468e8b513
 
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