India: The Child Sex Highway
101 East investigates Indian villages where it is custom for parents to sell their young daughters for sex.
A notorious highway in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh is the site of a shocking trade.
Girls as young as 10 are being forced to work as prostitutes – and it is their own families selling them to passing truckers.
The girls are from the Bachara tribe, an unprivileged-caste community known as Dalits.
Most of the Bachara men say discrimination stops them from getting jobs, so generations of girls have supported their families through prostitution.
Meneka’s mother forced her into prostitution at the age of 15. She now has a two-year-old daughter of her own and says she feels trapped.
“I feel like I am born in the wrong place, doing the wrong thing. But what can I do? I can’t say much because this is our tradition.”
Filming undercover, 101 East discovers that girls as young as 10 are being offered to men.
While India introduced tougher child rape laws in 2018, advocates say the laws are not properly enforced.
“The people who are exploiting the child – they are not customers, they are rapists,” says Asheif Shaikh, the founder of a local NGO that frees local girls from what he describes as sexual slavery.
“This practice is like the serial rape of the children … They are raped about 10 to 12 times in a day.”
Madhya Pradesh has the highest number of reported child rape cases of any state in the nation.
In this exclusive investigation, 101 East exposes the Indian villages where parents sell their daughters for sex.
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