About us

Debo Rescue Foundation

Thousands of children are forced to live an inhumane existence. Many have lost their parents and have nowhere to go in this wide world and dream for a bright future. So, Debo Rescue Foundation is out for the help and support of impoverished and abandoned little children, to change their destiny for eternity by providing Justice.

We love to see these victims from clutches of poverty, discrimination, illiteracy and exploitation and become dynamic personality with a bright future. Irrespective of their religious background or any other social discrimination, we count them as Gods very own and seek to eliminate child sex trafficking in India.

About Us

We are non-profit, government recognized and registered NGO working for rescue, rehabilitation and repatriation of victims for human trafficking from different parts of India, Nepal & Bangladesh and sold for forced prostitution. We have achieved the organizational capabilities and experience to fulfill our duties to this most neglected segment of our society.

We ensure that women’s human rights are respected, protected, and fulfilled. These young victims have lost all their human rights as they are physically and mentally tortured to force them to involve in sexual activities. We ensure that they regain all their human rights by rescuing them from the inhuman situation and rehabilitating them.

Trafficking V/S Prostitution

Trafficking does not mean prostitution. They are not synonymous. In understanding trafficking, one should delink it from prostitution. As per the existing law, Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act 1956 (ITPA) prostitution becomes an offence when there is commercial exploitation of a person. If a woman or child is sexually exploited and any person gains out of the same, it amounts to commercial sexual exploitation (CSE), which is a legally punishable offence wherein the culpability lies against all exploiters.

Trafficking is the process of recruiting, contracting, procuring or hiring a person for commercial sexual exploitation (CSE). Therefore, trafficking is a process and commercial sexual exploitation (CSE) is the result. The ‘demand’ in commercial sexual exploitation (CSE) generates, promotes and perpetuates trafficking. This is a vicious cycle. Trafficking could also be a means for other types of violations such as for developing pornographic material, for promoting sex tourism, for sexual exploitation under the facade of bar tending, massage parlours etc, or even for exploitative labour where sexual abuse may or may not coexist.

ITPA envisages only trafficking for commercial sexual exploitation (CSE). Commercial activity need not be in a brothel, but could also occur in places including a residential dwelling, a vehicle, etc. Therefore a police officer who is acting under ITPA has powers to take steps in all such situations where trafficking leads to or is likely to lead to commercial sexual exploitation (CSE) in any form, including those under the facade of massage parlours, bar tending, ‘tourist circuit’, ‘escort services’, ‘friendship clubs’, etc.

The organized crime of trafficking: Human trafficking is a crime of crimes. It is a basket of crimes. In this basket one can dig out the elements of abduction, kidnapping, illegal detainment, illegal confinement, criminal intimidation, hurt, grievous hurt, sexual assault, outraging modesty, rape, unnatural offences, selling and buying of human beings, servitude, criminal conspiracy, abetment etc. Therefore, multiple abuse and abusers located at different points of time and place together constitute the organized crime of trafficking. A host of human rights violations like denial of privacy, denial of justice, denial of access to justice, deprivation of basis rights and dignity etc constitute other part of the exploitation. Therefore, there is no doubt that trafficking is an organized crime