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Healthy India | Why mental healthcare is a human right of the survivors of human trafficking

Many of the survivors of human trafficking situations in many parts of the World, including India, are left to fend for themselves and do not get the benefit that can accrue from standardised but individually tailored mental health services at any of the stages of rescue, relief or rehabilitation, writes Prof. (Dr.) Nimesh G. Desai, former Director of the Institute of Human Behaviour & Allied Sciences.

By Prof. (Dr.) Nimesh G Desai  Dec 13, 2023 10:42:55 AM IST (Updated)

5 Min Read

There has been evidence of a market for human beings as commodities, all through recorded history in various ways. In some enlightened circles, variably in different contexts, such practices had been objected to and argued against. The race-based phenomenon of black African persons being enslaved and transported across continents, for ownership by families of affording white families, has been perhaps one of the most well-known large-scale phenomena of human trafficking.
This single largest instance got corrected in steps by the conscientious American Society and Nation, although in steps and a bit tardive. That entire set of experiences of the Freedom of Slaves in the 19th Century, and Racial Rights Movement, in the late 20th Century, by themselves ought to have awakened the global community to be able to completely root out any such occurrences.
The two World Wars in the first half of the 20th Century, especially the 2nd World War and the consequent Human Rights movement, could well have been expected to arouse the collective conscience of this most evolved species to ensure complete elimination of the phenomenon.