
Itanagar, February 19 Police in Itanagar have busted an organized interstate child trafficking racket operating between Assam and Arunachal Pradesh, rescuing three minor girls and arresting six people accused of trafficking, purchasing, and exploiting children as domestic laborers, officials said on Thursday.
The Capital Superintendent of Police (SP) Jummar Basar said the case came to light after a severely injured seven-year-old girl was found wandering alone in F-Sector here around 4:30 am on February 7.
A resident took her to the Women Police Station, from where she was taken for treatment and counseling. The child was later provided with psychological support at 'Ane's Home', a one-stop support center for women and children within the WPS premises.
"During counseling, the girl disclosed details that exposed a wider trafficking network, prompting the registration of a case under relevant provisions of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, the Child Labour Act, and the Juvenile Justice Act," the SP said.
Investigators found that the child had been trafficked from Assam and employed as a domestic help in an Itanagar household, where she was repeatedly assaulted and subjected to cruelty. She escaped on the night of February 6 and was subsequently rescued, police said.
Further investigation revealed a pattern of illegal transfer and sale of minor children across districts and states over several years. Children were allegedly sold through informal cash transactions without legal adoption procedures, deprived of education and identity documents, and forced into domestic labor. Police also found that multiple children from the same families had been trafficked to different households.
Acting on leads, police teams rescued three minor girls from different locations and arrested six people for their alleged roles in trafficking, purchasing, and exploiting minors.
Police have also served notices to three other people for suspected involvement or knowledge of the network.
The rescued children have been produced before the Child Welfare Committee and placed in recognized shelter homes for care and rehabilitation.
The SP said two children linked to the racket remain missing, including a boy untraceable since 2021, and efforts are underway to trace them and identify more victims and perpetrators.
He said the racket operated through informal brokers and family-level transactions, with children bought and sold for cash and deployed as domestic workers. Victims were systematically denied schooling, documentation, and basic rights, indicating long-term trafficking links between Assam and Arunachal Pradesh.
