The women desperate to leave Nepal


The trafficking of Nepali women increased rapidly after the 2015 earthquake, and social media has been making the traffickers’ job even easier, discovers Vicky Spratt.
The sound of laughter and singing echoes around the building, mixing with the beeping horns of the traffic outside.
The walls are draped with vibrant orange, turquoise and pink silk scarves all made as a form of therapy by the survivors who live here.
This is a safe house in Kathmandu for women who were trafficked into prostitution and are now being supported as they try to return to their normal lives.
I’m here to meet 35-year-old Chandani.
Just over a year ago a stranger added her on Facebook, she accepted, and soon he slid into her DMs and they began exchanging private, direct messages online. The stranger turned out to be an agent for the traffickers.
As I wait for Chandani I stare out of the window and watch swirls of yellow dust mix with rain. The Himalayas – which run along the northern edge of the green valley that cradles Nepal’s capital – are hidden behind cloud and fog.
Sujata, my translator, says that the dust is from construction work. “They’re rebuilding the city,” she explains, after much of Kathmandu was destroyed by the 2015 earthquake. Natural disasters, it turns out, are good for the construction industry… and for people-traffickers.


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