Climate Change and Human Trafficking in West Bengal
• Climate change, triggered by five tropical cyclones since May 2020, is a major factor in human trafficking in West Bengal.
• Experts suggest that climate change is pushing people into poverty and driving human trafficking.
• Back-to-back cyclones like Amphan and Yaas have destroyed livelihoods, increased migration, and exposed vulnerable populations to greater risks.
• Traffickers exploit socio-environmental vulnerabilities and limited access to essential services.
• In 2022, 58,871 people were reported missing from West Bengal, 53,655 women, and 12,455 children.
• A conviction rate of 55% in human trafficking cases in the State in the same year.
• ILFAT (Integrated Leaders Forum Against Trafficking) advocates for the integration of climate change in the fight against trafficking.
• Climate change triggers disasters, forcing vulnerable communities to migrate and lose their livelihoods.
• Climate change also pushes poverty into human trafficking, as evidenced by 28 female trafficking survivors from Hasnabad and Hingalganj areas of the Sundarbans.