Twenty-eight-year-old Safina Akimova, an Indian citizen who married a Ukrainian man in 2019, had recently launched a business in Sumy, Ukraine and delivered a baby boy. The family then planned a trip to India to visit relatives but, as soon as they booked the flights, war broke out. “We spent nights in the bunker and returned to our apartment during the day in the hope that the condition will improve,” said Akimova. “I am a lactating mother and needed proper meals, but we were trying to survive and ate one oatmeal bowl a day. We had stored baby food, but when we were running out of it, we had to then take the tough decision that I leave the country with our son.” Traversing a 1,200-kilometer (750-mile) journey on foot to the Polish border was grueling for this fatigued mother with an infant. When she reached Poland after traveling for four days, she was so exhausted she could barely move. She then tested positive for COVID-19. “I was put in a quarantine facility,” she said, where she took care of her baby son while she recovered. During this time Akimova contacted friends, who suggested moving to Germany. Yet this raised new concerns. “We had heard of cases where people had trafficked women, Ukrainian refugees, while offering to help,” she said quietly. The threat of exploitation has added yet another dark layer to the grim reality these women face. Soon after the war erupted, reports began to surface that human trafficking — which is rampant in Ukraine and neighboring countries even in normal times — was on the rise, as predators exploited vulnerable women and children amid the chaos of war. One suspected ringleader was arrested in Kyiv after allegedly offering bogus employment to women who were then forced into prostitution. “A crisis like Ukraine is a business opportunity for criminals,” said human trafficking expert Lauren Agnew, of the organization CARE, in a public statement. Some predators have even posed as crisis volunteers, offering transportation to refugees they intend to sell into sex work. |