Sunday, June 26, 2011

NCPA warns of trafficking threat

http://www.bbc.co.uk/sinhala/images/furniture/banner.gif25 June, 2011



Child abuse
The NCPA is worried that trafficking may rise as a result of surge in tourism
A government-appointed official in Sri Lanka has appealed to families in the north to protect under-age girls from sex traffickers.
Anoma Dissanayake of the National Child Protection Authority warned parents to be wary of strangers who offered to find their daughters jobs.
Women from the north of Sri Lanka, which is in desperate need of development, were particularly vulnerable, she said.
Earlier this week, nine women, including two under-age girls, were rescued from a brothel in the capital, Colombo.
She says two of them were teenagers, while others include divorcees, widows and young mothers.
One underage girl is a Tamil national from Mullaitivu and the other a Sinhala girl from Bandarawela, she said.
Three suspects were arrested in connection with the abuse.
The trafficking was busted when a teenage girl came to health facility to undergo family planning procedure.
Mrs Dissanayake also says government is worried that trafficking within the country may rise as a result of surge in tourism.
==========================================================

Teen call-girl racket from North busted

http://sundaytimes.lk/images/sundaylogo_new.jpg


Police raid brothel on tip off by runaway girl; National Hospital doc and midwife involved in preventing unwanted pregnancies
By Damith Wickremasekara
Trafficking in girls, including underage children from the North, for prostitution, under the guise of employment in Colombo, has been unearthed by the National Child Protection Authority (NCPA).
The breakthrough came when a 16-year-old girl ran away from the National Hospital in Colombo where she had been warded for an operation to prevent pregnancy.
“The girl had run away to the police and related her story, and she was handed over to us,” said NCPA Chairperson Anoma Dissanayake. She said that, based on the information provided by the runaway girl, police raided a brothel in Maradana and found eight girls between the ages of 16 and 24 being used as prostitutes.
The Maradana building where the Police
rescued nine teenage girls from a brothel
Of the nine girls in custody, six are from the Northern Province and one from the east. When the police raided the location, it appeared to be a lodge with nothing suspicious, but the girl in custody, who was aware of the layout of the building, had pointed out a cupboard, telling the police to push the cupboard aside, where they found an opening into another room.
Police found eight more girls – two of them underage, huddled in a room. Among the other items recovered from the room were 1,500 condoms. The girl who first reported the incident to the police was from the Mullaitivu district and had been brought to Colombo by a broker.
She claimed that she had been used as a prostitute in other locations by the same manager of this brothel, and paid amounts varying between Rs. 500 and Rs. 1,000. Another 18-year-old girl who had been displaced in the final stages of the conflict, had initially lived in a camp for the displaced in Vavuniya, and brought to Colombo by a broker, promising her employment.
Ms. Dissanayake said the girls in the brothel had been looked after by a midwife of the Colombo National Hospital. “She was in charge of giving them contraceptives and looking into their medical needs. She had the assistance of a doctor as well,” Ms. Dissanayake said.   Read more...