Sahajveer Baweja* & Vansh Bhatnagar**

This article highlights the urgent need for a dedicated human smuggling law in India while scrutinizing the nuanced disparities between the crimes of human smuggling and trafficking, despite their apparent similarities. The article delves into examining Punjab’s status as a smuggling epicentre and critiques the implementation flaws of the Punjab Human Smuggling Act, 2012. The analysis advocates for legislative reforms, awareness campaigns, and enhanced enforcement to combat this pervasive issue effectively. Ultimately, the article calls upon the government to rectify the conceptual confusion between the crimes of smuggling and trafficking in India, thereby safeguarding human rights and dismantling human smuggling networks within the nation.
In the heart of one of the world’s most vibrant nations lies a clandestine network that preys on desperation, exploits vulnerability, and thrives in the shadows. In India, human smuggling has emerged as a prominent organized criminal activity, exemplified by the recent detention of a chartered plane in France carrying 276 Indians under suspicion of human smuggling. Despite its prevalence, India faces a legal blind spot by muddling the lines between human smuggling and human trafficking. At present, no legislation in India defines, deals with, or penalizes the offence of human smuggling contrary to the offence of human trafficking that is punishable under Section 370 of the Indian Penal Code. Of course, human smuggling and human trafficking both are a global threat and have undesirable consequences on society but there is a sharp distinction between these criminal activities that has remained unattended by the law, which now requires correction.
This article delves into the imperative need for a robust human smuggling law in India. Firstly, the article scrutinizes the nuanced distinction between human smuggling and trafficking and how both of these organized crimes, may look similar, but have significant differences. Further, the article examines Punjab’s status as a smuggling epicentre and critiques the implementation of the Punjab Human Smuggling Act, 2012, revealing flaws in its scope and enforcement. The analysis underscores the necessity for legislative reforms, awareness campaigns, and enhanced enforcement to combat this pervasive issue effectively. Ultimately, it calls for a nuanced understanding of smuggling dynamics and urges the Indian government to address the conceptual confusion between smuggling and trafficking, advocating for a holistic approach to safeguard human rights and combat organized criminal activities within the nation.
The blurred line between Human Smuggling and Human Trafficking
In 2000, the UN adopted two different protocols dealing with the issues of human trafficking and human smuggling. The UN Protocol on Smuggling of Migrants (2000), defines migrant smuggling as an act of procurement of an illegal entry of a person by an agency for some financial or other material benefit. The commodity in this crime is the illegal entry of a person into another country and the offence is against the State’s immigration laws. Alternatively, the UN Protocol on Trafficking in Persons (2000) defines human trafficking as the control of an agency over another person for exploitation. The commodity in this crime is the control and exploitation of a person, and the offence is against the person who is being trafficked. Thus, the stark difference between both criminal activities scratches out from the ingredient of consent where human smuggling involves a voluntary agreement, unlike the coerced nature of human trafficking.
The choice for being smuggled may be between unattractive alternatives, but it is still a choice and there is no coercion. Such a concept of voluntary choice is inherently non-existent in the definition of human trafficking. Though, both the offences may act because of the vulnerability of the person, but at its foundational stage, these criminalities posit a clear distinction, and the Indian laws have failed to pay attention to this distinctiveness leading to – convictions of human smuggling under wrongful crime-head such as offences under cheating, forgery, human trafficking and breach of trust; inadequate assessment of the quantum of punishment as there is no legislative wisdom provided to direct the judicial mind in punishing human smuggling; lapses in evaluating the evidence of the smuggling activities in India because at present, no evidence based studies or statistics are available that could highlight the menace of smuggling crime in India; and an inability to identify true orchestrators behind such organized activities as without law, punishing the actual criminals are a far-fetched idea.
Punjab: The epicentre of human smuggling activities in India
Punjab, a State in North India, with a reputation as a human smuggling epicentre, epitomizes these aforesaid issues. According to the National Crime Records Bureau Report, 2022, which blurs the line between human smuggling and human trafficking and provides a common tally, reports only 53 cases of human trafficking in Punjab over the last three years. This figure is perplexing, given Punjab’s notorious reputation for its unmonitored donkey routes, facilitating the illegal movement of individuals to different countries, and a UNODC study estimating almost 20,000 people attempting illegal migration to European Union Countries from Punjab every year. This discrepancy between reported cases and the actual scale of human smuggling highlights systemic challenges in detection, reporting, and prosecution.
Punjab Human Smuggling Act, 2012
It is not that the Punjab is unaware of the menace happening in their State. In response to the present issue, Punjab took cognizance of the human smuggling problem within its borders by introducing the first legislation of its kind on human smuggling in India – Punjab Human Smuggling Act, 2012 . This law presses for mandatory registration for travel agents, intending to mitigate those illegal travel agencies which are functioning as dummy travel agent companies but are operationalizing as organized human smugglers, sending people outside India through an illegal route. Thus, the law mandates that no person shall undertake the profession of a travel agent unless the person has obtained a license from the nodal agencies, and any non-compliance to the same is punishable with a minimum punishment of 3 years which can extend upto 7 years.
However, despite its laudable objective, the law’s implementation has faltered. The 2018 data reveals that only 1818 travel agents have registered to date which is significantly less than 25% of Punjab’s total immigration travel agents. Moreover, the Act’s focus on mandatory registration of travel agents fails to address the core issue of identifying and penalizing the orchestrators of human smuggling – the clandestine syndicates known as snakeheads. These criminal networks operate with impunity, exploiting gaps in enforcement and leveraging corruption to evade detection and prosecution. The Act’s failure to provide provisions for stricter surveillance of known smuggling routes further compounds the problem, allowing illegal activities to flourish unchecked.
Further, a critical analysis reveals inherent flaws in the Act’s language and implementation strategies. While the Act defines human smuggling for the first time in India under Section 2(g), its narrow definition restricts the scope of smuggling to specific activities involving inducing, alluring, deceiving, or cheating individuals for the purpose of exporting or transporting them out of India. The definition fails to include those acts of human smuggling within its purview in which the person either voluntarily agrees or gives free consent for being smuggled outside India, and therefore, again blurs the line between crimes of human smuggling and human trafficking. As per this definition, facilitating the illegal entry of a person into another country is not an offence of human smuggling unless such facilitation is done with the intent to defraud or cheat such person who is to be smuggled. Hence, the definition undermines the transactional nature of smuggling, where the primary commodity is the illicit entry itself, and is not dependent on any preceding act.
Similarly, while the legislative intent behind the Punjab Human Smuggling Act may have been to combat human smuggling, its focus is predominantly directed towards regulating travel agents. This narrow emphasis overlooks other key stakeholders involved in human smuggling operations, such as illegal operators or syndicates. By failing to explicitly target these illegal entities, the Act’s effectiveness is significantly compromised.
Is there a solution ahead?
To combat this issue effectively, there is an urgent need for a multifaceted approach to be taken by the Indian government as a whole, unlike the approach taken by Punjab which fails to undertake holistic and proactive measures to combat this complex issue. Firstly, legislative reforms must be enacted to differentiate between human smuggling and human trafficking. A clear definition of human smuggling as a crime should be introduced. Aid can be taken from definition as provided under the UN Protocol on Smuggling of Migrants (2000), to which India is a signatory. The definition should not vaguely touch upon the essentials of crime but rather delineate clearly, stating that any facilitation of illegal entry into another country of a person shall amount to an act of human smuggling.
Additionally, systemic challenges should be addressed by enhancing enforcement capabilities at the earliest so that organized criminal activities are eradicated once and for all. A law/framework should be made that necessitates investing in law enforcement resources, including personnel, training, and technology, to effectively identify, investigate, and prosecute human smuggling networks. This involves establishing specialized units dedicated to tackling human smuggling, equipped with the necessary expertise and resources to navigate the complexities of these criminal operations. At the same time, attention should also be paid to addressing the root causes of human smuggling, such as poverty, lack of economic opportunities, and social inequality, by introducing comprehensive socio-economic development initiatives. Significantly, the vulnerability quotient should be addressed at the earliest.
All in all, India first needs to rescue itself from the conceptual confusion between human smuggling and human trafficking and crystalize the differences between both the offences. The nation needs to fill up the legislative void by enacting a encyclopaedic law on curbing human smuggling within its territory. A closer examination of Punjab’s smuggling law serves as a relevant case study to pinpoint the pitfalls in our approach and comprehend why its execution fell short. It is essential to acknowledge that, for a penal law to be effective, we should first understand the ingredients of the offence we are penalizing, and then formulate the law, instead of crafting the law first and then attempting to justify its existence. Therefore, the rationale for a law should precede its foundation for it to be workable and effective. What we need to understand is that human smuggling is not a foreign issue but an issue well-rooted in the nation which is visible but voiceless, and can erode the pillars of democratically protected human rights, if left unattended.
*Sahajveer Baweja is a practicing advocate at High Court of Rajasthan, and a Criminologist graduated from University of Cambridge.
**Vansh Bhatnagar is currently a fourth year law student at NLU, Patiala.