EHAAT CSOs gain new insights into trafficking between East Africa and India

The trafficking of African women into India is on the rise, according to Red Rope, whose case studies show that women are often recruited directly from the streets while selling goods, lured with promises of jobs in India as salon workers, housemaids, or restaurant staff. In most cases, their travel documentation is arranged by traffickers using straightforward E-visas; however, upon arrival, their passports are confiscated and they are coerced into sexual exploitation under the pretext of “debts” ranging from US$1,000 to US$4,000, which the traffickers claim must be repaid. The women are groomed, tracked, and manipulated and, even after their “debt” is settled, many are left undocumented and stranded, often forced into street work for survival.
Africans in India face severe prejudice and are often compelled to live in slums or informal settlements without access to legal employment or social support, Red Rope reports. In major cities such as Mumbai, Delhi and Bangalore, African communities account for approximately 5 to 10 percent of the population. Most live in marginalized neighborhoods in cramped, unhygienic conditions and experience high levels of violence, including sexual assault, physical abuse, and humiliation.
While Red Rope believes that prevention is more effective than rescue or rehabilitation, its awareness programs have led to several successful rescues. In 2022, it was called upon to assist in a case involving two Uzbek women who had been trafficked into India via Nepal, eventually arriving in Delhi. Despite multiple rejections from potential partners, Red Rope, with the support of a lawyer, managed to repatriate the women after three months of intensive intervention. Shockingly, the trafficker was a legal official with a chamber at the High Court of India.
This case paved the way for further interventions involving Uzbek and, later, Ugandan women, prompting Red Rope to focus increasingly on African nationals trafficked into India, despite the deep-rooted racial prejudices that often complicated their efforts. Working alongside partners such as HAART Kenya, Willow International and The Salvation Army, the organization has to date repatriated 62 survivors from Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda, and Cameroon. It has also built relationships with the Kenyan and Ugandan High Commissions, securing financial and logistical support, and hopes to expand collaboration to more African embassies.
However, the group faces significant challenges. Limited financial resources, a lack of team capacity, and inconsistent documentation and embassy support further hinder its work.
Additionally, survivors are often reluctant to discuss their past experiences, and many skill-building programs fail to align with their interests or abilities, focusing heavily on tailoring, baking and jewelry-making while overlooking useful skills such as communication, sales and digital literacy.
Red Rope has also identified broader systemic issues, including low school completion rates, high rates of teenage pregnancy, absent fathers and dysfunctional family structures, limited support for students transitioning from primary to secondary education, and difficulties in securing birth certificates for children born in India.
In response, Red Rope advocates for innovative and transformative solutions, including the creation of survivor-led businesses, training programs that match survivors’ talents with real economic opportunities, and sustainable business models that empower survivors. Ultimately, Red Rope asserts, this movement must be survivor-led – not only within organizations but also across business and leadership. Cross-regional collaboration is also key to effective action, and Red Rope plans to continue working with HAART Kenya and other partners in its efforts to prevent and eliminate human trafficking between continents.
EHAAT is a regional network of CSOs dedicated to combating human trafficking, forced labour, and exploitation across the East and Horn of Africa, with support from the Better Migration Management (BMM) Programme, funded by the European Union and Germany. Its members operate across countries including Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan and Uganda.
Our new EHAAT regional routes mapping report highlights re-trafficking as a persistent concern in East Africa, with nearly half of documented survivors trafficked more than once. The findings point to layered vulnerabilities across age, gender, education, and displacement, underscoring the need for long-term, trauma-informed support.
Civil society groups in the EHAAT Network are shifting focus from documenting re-trafficking to identifying practical steps, like expanding legal aid and compensation, to strengthen survivor protection.
New data collected by EHAAT civil society groups offers fresh insights into survivor recovery journeys, service gaps, and outcomes across East Africa. The findings highlight the central role of legal support in enabling access to services, compensation, and longer-term protection.
Civil society groups in the EHAAT Network are shifting focus from documenting re-trafficking to identifying practical steps, like expanding legal aid and compensation, to strengthen survivor protection.
New data collected by EHAAT civil society groups offers fresh insights into survivor recovery journeys, service gaps, and outcomes across East Africa. The findings highlight the central role of legal support in enabling access to services, compensation, and longer-term protection.
Our new EHAAT regional routes mapping report highlights re-trafficking as a persistent concern in East Africa, with nearly half of documented survivors trafficked more than once. The findings point to layered vulnerabilities across age, gender, education, and displacement, underscoring the need for long-term, trauma-informed support.
Freedom Collaborative and the EHAAT Network have released a new regional routes mapping report documenting nearly 400 cases of unsafe migration and trafficking across East Africa. The findings reveal shifting destinations, persistent re-trafficking, and emerging patterns of exploitation — and highlight the vital role of civil society in shaping more effective protection responses.
East Africa’s annual Regional CSO Forum brought together EHAAT members in Bishoftu, Ethiopia, to strengthen cooperation, share new research, and agree on concrete commitments to enhance anti-trafficking responses and support for vulnerable migrants.
Civil society groups from the EHAAT Network joined a regional call with Red Rope and HAART Kenya to discuss rising cases of African women trafficked into India, highlighting systemic vulnerabilities, rescue efforts, and the urgent need for survivor-led solutions.
EHAAT civil society organizations have launched a new bi-weekly communications training program, hosted by BMM, to strengthen outreach, media engagement, and ethical storytelling in the anti-trafficking sector.
EHAAT members met in Kampala, Uganda, for a three-day Resource Mobilization Strategy Workshop facilitated by Freedom Collaborative, developing a collective plan to strengthen sustainability, expand reach, and amplify impact across the region.
EHAAT members gathered in Juba, South Sudan, for the final phase of a regional training series on survivor inclusion, equipping CSOs with tools to ethically, securely, and sustainably embed survivor voices in their work.
Collaborative efforts by the East and Horn of Africa Anti-Trafficking (EHAAT) Network, facilitated by Freedom Collaborative, recently led to the development of impactful region-specific recommendations for the Africa Regional Review of the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM), which took place in October 2024
East African CSOs agree plans to build on previous successes at this year’s EHAAT Regional Forum.
Our new EHAAT regional routes mapping report highlights re-trafficking as a persistent concern in East Africa, with nearly half of documented survivors trafficked more than once. The findings point to layered vulnerabilities across age, gender, education, and displacement, underscoring the need for long-term, trauma-informed support.
Civil society groups in the EHAAT Network are shifting focus from documenting re-trafficking to identifying practical steps, like expanding legal aid and compensation, to strengthen survivor protection.
Civil society groups in the EHAAT Network are shifting focus from documenting re-trafficking to identifying practical steps, like expanding legal aid and compensation, to strengthen survivor protection.
New data collected by EHAAT civil society groups offers fresh insights into survivor recovery journeys, service gaps, and outcomes across East Africa. The findings highlight the central role of legal support in enabling access to services, compensation, and longer-term protection.
Our new EHAAT regional routes mapping report highlights re-trafficking as a persistent concern in East Africa, with nearly half of documented survivors trafficked more than once. The findings point to layered vulnerabilities across age, gender, education, and displacement, underscoring the need for long-term, trauma-informed support.
Freedom Collaborative and the EHAAT Network have released a new regional routes mapping report documenting nearly 400 cases of unsafe migration and trafficking across East Africa. The findings reveal shifting destinations, persistent re-trafficking, and emerging patterns of exploitation — and highlight the vital role of civil society in shaping more effective protection responses.
East Africa’s annual Regional CSO Forum brought together EHAAT members in Bishoftu, Ethiopia, to strengthen cooperation, share new research, and agree on concrete commitments to enhance anti-trafficking responses and support for vulnerable migrants.
Civil society groups from the EHAAT Network joined a regional call with Red Rope and HAART Kenya to discuss rising cases of African women trafficked into India, highlighting systemic vulnerabilities, rescue efforts, and the urgent need for survivor-led solutions.
EHAAT civil society organizations have launched a new bi-weekly communications training program, hosted by BMM, to strengthen outreach, media engagement, and ethical storytelling in the anti-trafficking sector.
EHAAT members met in Kampala, Uganda, for a three-day Resource Mobilization Strategy Workshop facilitated by Freedom Collaborative, developing a collective plan to strengthen sustainability, expand reach, and amplify impact across the region.
EHAAT members gathered in Juba, South Sudan, for the final phase of a regional training series on survivor inclusion, equipping CSOs with tools to ethically, securely, and sustainably embed survivor voices in their work.
Collaborative efforts by the East and Horn of Africa Anti-Trafficking (EHAAT) Network, facilitated by Freedom Collaborative, recently led to the development of impactful region-specific recommendations for the Africa Regional Review of the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM), which took place in October 2024
East African CSOs agree plans to build on previous successes at this year’s EHAAT Regional Forum.
Our new EHAAT regional routes mapping report highlights re-trafficking as a persistent concern in East Africa, with nearly half of documented survivors trafficked more than once. The findings point to layered vulnerabilities across age, gender, education, and displacement, underscoring the need for long-term, trauma-informed support.
Civil society groups in the EHAAT Network are shifting focus from documenting re-trafficking to identifying practical steps, like expanding legal aid and compensation, to strengthen survivor protection.
New data collected by EHAAT civil society groups offers fresh insights into survivor recovery journeys, service gaps, and outcomes across East Africa. The findings highlight the central role of legal support in enabling access to services, compensation, and longer-term protection.
Our new EHAAT regional routes mapping report highlights re-trafficking as a persistent concern in East Africa, with nearly half of documented survivors trafficked more than once. The findings point to layered vulnerabilities across age, gender, education, and displacement, underscoring the need for long-term, trauma-informed support.
Freedom Collaborative and the EHAAT Network have released a new regional routes mapping report documenting nearly 400 cases of unsafe migration and trafficking across East Africa. The findings reveal shifting destinations, persistent re-trafficking, and emerging patterns of exploitation — and highlight the vital role of civil society in shaping more effective protection responses.
East Africa’s annual Regional CSO Forum brought together EHAAT members in Bishoftu, Ethiopia, to strengthen cooperation, share new research, and agree on concrete commitments to enhance anti-trafficking responses and support for vulnerable migrants.
Civil society groups from the EHAAT Network joined a regional call with Red Rope and HAART Kenya to discuss rising cases of African women trafficked into India, highlighting systemic vulnerabilities, rescue efforts, and the urgent need for survivor-led solutions.
EHAAT civil society organizations have launched a new bi-weekly communications training program, hosted by BMM, to strengthen outreach, media engagement, and ethical storytelling in the anti-trafficking sector.
EHAAT members met in Kampala, Uganda, for a three-day Resource Mobilization Strategy Workshop facilitated by Freedom Collaborative, developing a collective plan to strengthen sustainability, expand reach, and amplify impact across the region.
EHAAT members gathered in Juba, South Sudan, for the final phase of a regional training series on survivor inclusion, equipping CSOs with tools to ethically, securely, and sustainably embed survivor voices in their work.
Collaborative efforts by the East and Horn of Africa Anti-Trafficking (EHAAT) Network, facilitated by Freedom Collaborative, recently led to the development of impactful region-specific recommendations for the Africa Regional Review of the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM), which took place in October 2024
East African CSOs agree plans to build on previous successes at this year’s EHAAT Regional Forum.