Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Nepal Quake Victims Now Face Threat Of Human Trafficking
Nepal Quake Victims Now Face Threat Of Human Trafficking
Mar 28, 2026 4:48 PM

Nepal has a human trafficking issue. With an open border between Nepal and India, traffickers openly move people between the two countries with promises of work. Nepalese women are trafficked to China for sex work. With the recent massive earthquake, the Nepalese who have been displaced now face the threat of trafficking.

Tens of thousands of young women from regions devastated by the earthquake in Nepal are being targeted by human traffickers supplying a network of brothels across south Asia, campaigners in Kathmandu and affected areas say.

The 7.8-magnitude quake, which killed more than 7,000 people, has devastated poor munities, with hundreds of thousands losing their homes and possessions. Girls and young women in munities have long been targeted by traffickers, who abduct them and force them into sex work.

It’s easy for traffickers to lure women under the guise of aid, especially in places where NGOs and aid workers are ubiquitous. The chaos caused by the earthquake makes the job of traffickers much easier, especially as many families e desperate.

[One young woman] had been taken from her village in Sindhupalchok, the hill area north of Kathmandu, to the Indian border town of Siliguri where she was sold to a brothel owner, repeatedly beaten, systematically raped by hundreds of men and infected with HIV. “I do not have nightmares about my time there. I have erased it from my memory,” she said.

It mon for traffickers to promise young women marriage to wealthy foreigners, work as nannies, or domestic workers. Men are often lured with construction jobs. With high illiteracy and poverty rates, traffickers don’t often have to “sell” very hard.

Read “Nepal quake survivors face threat from human traffickers supplying sex trade” at The Guardian.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Journal of Markets & Morality on Journaltalk
As a new feature for the Journal of Markets & Morality, the folks at Journaltalk have helped us create discussion pages for the editorial and each of the articles of our most recent issue, vol. 17, no. 1 (Spring 2014). The issue is ing in print in the next few weeks but already published online. While all articles require a subscription (or a small fee per article), this issue’s editorial on the state of academic peer review is open access....
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 3 of 12 — What Economic Freedom Is and Isn’t
[Part 1 is here.] Even a cursory look at the annual list of the freest and least free economies in the world suggests a strong correlation between economic freedom and the prosperity of its citizens, including its poorest citizens. But there’s another correlation that tends to capture the attention of those making a cultural critique of the free economy. They note that America is economically free, and that it’s experiencing cultural decay, so they conclude the first causes the second....
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 4 of 12 — The Crunchy Con Critique
[Part 1 is here.] The free economy frees entrepreneurs to create new wealth for themselves and others, which brings us to the issue of consumption. In his book Crunchy Cons, conservative author Rod Dreher describes consumerism this way: “Consumerism fetishizes individual choice, and sees its expansion as unambiguous progress. A culture guided by consumerist values is one that es technology without question and prizes efficiency…. A consumerist society encourages its members both to find and express their personal identity through...
Religious Identification on Resumes Leads to Hiring Discrimination
While in college, did you ever join the Catholic Student Association, Campus Crusade for Christ, or some other student religious organization? If so, you might want to leave that off your resume. A new study in the sociology journal Social Currents found that applicants who expressed a religious identity were 26 percent less likely to receive a response from employers. For the experiment, the researchers sent out resumes panies in the South from fictional recent graduates of flagship universities located...
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 2 of 12 — The Great Society
[Part 1 of 12 here] In the 1950s and ‘60s, blacks were winning the civil rights they should have had all along, but in the midst of this positive trend, increasingly aggressive minimum wage regulations and extensive welfare programs were beginning to displace paratively free market of labor and private charity. munities flooded with this state-sponsored mode of redistributive justice now face far higher levels injustice in the form of unpunished crimes munity breakdown than before the redistributive justice arrived....
How Economic Growth Sparked an Adoption Revolution
I love babies. Andbecause I love babies, I love economic growth. I’ve explained that connection several times on this blog already, but there is another oft-overlooked way that economic growth helps babies. Inthe early 1900s, there weremore babies than parents could feed. Illegitimate infants suffered high rates of mortality from murder (usually by the mother) or neglect (as wards of the state). Today, a hundred years later, the situation is drastically different. As Megan McCardle notes,adoptable infants are so rare...
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 5 of 12 — Capitalism from Christendom
[Part 1 is here.] mon reading of Western history holds that the principles of the free economy grew out of the secular Enlightenment and had little to do with Christianity. This is mistaken. The free economy (and we can speak more broadly here of the free society) didn’t spring from the soil of the secular Enlightenment, much less, as some imagine, from a Darwinian, survival-of-the-fittest, dog-eat-dog philosophy of life. The free economy sprang from the soil of Christian Medieval Europe...
You Are The Special
The much-touted Lego Movie drops on disc today, and before you pick up your copy, I encourage you to remember that “Everything Really Is Awesome.” Emmet’s words to Lord Business apply to us all: You don’t have to be the bad guy. You are the most talented, most interesting, and most extraordinary person in the universe. And you are capable of amazing things. Because you are the Special. And so am I. And so is everyone. The prophecy is made...
Audio: Sirico on Poverty, Pope Francis & Obamacare in Baton Rouge, Louisiana
This morning, Acton Institute President Rev. Robert A. Sirico took some time away from his preparations for Acton Universityto speak with Jim Engster, host of The Jim Engster Showon WRKF radio in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, discussing how to address the issue of poverty in society, and the approach taken by Pope Francis and the church in general to that and other issues. They also discussed the problems with the ObamaCare model of health-care reform, among other issues. You can listen...
‘I Started Calling Myself A Commodity:’ Surrogacy In The U.S.
: a language teacher and a surrogate. She’s rented out her womb several times, as a way to help mainly gay couples have children. She says being pregnant is rather easy for her, but even she has some issues with the process. [Jessica] had a less positive experience with a third set of New Yorkers seeking her services. She signed a nondisclosure agreement, which prevents her from naming the couple, and will only say they are “well-known,” “mega rich” and...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved