12 Rescued from Sexual Exploitation in Kenya


Twelve girls between 7 and 17 years old bravely accepted freedom.

Nine of the girls were rescued from child sex trafficking and sexual exploitation, including a 13-year-old who was trapped in a forced child marriage. The three youngest girls were rescued from situations that exposed them to the sex industry, putting them at imminent risk of sexual exploitation.

All twelve children have begun their new lives by enrolling in Freedom Plans. Learn more about economic empowerment changing lives.

Rescue Update Archive

12 Children free from exploitation in Kenya


All the children have been enrolled in Freedom Plans to begin a new, brighter chapter in their lives.

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89 people rescued from international labor trafficking


89 people are now home after suffering incredible brutality at the hands of international traffickers in Asia.

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10 Children Free from Exploitation and Working Toward Freedom!


Ten children in South Asia have been rescued from sexual exploitation and enrolled in Freedom Plans.

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68 Rescued from Human Traffickers at the Nepal Border


Border agents stopped traffickers from luring 68 people out of Nepal.

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Nearly three quarters of the victims met their traffickers online, mostly on Facebook. The criminals built relationships with their targets and then, after figuring out their needs, offered them romantic relationships, false jobs or even trips to see relatives that lived across the border. Thanks to our border agents, these people will never see what REALLY awaited them on the other side.

36 Survivors Enroll in Freedom Plans in Africa


36 girls from three countries bravely accepted freedom from exploitation.

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All were enduring sexual exploitation just to survive. Only three were able to attend school; the rest had been forced to drop out. Among the survivors are six young mothers with babies of their own.

The future will be challenging, but our hope is that they’ll be prepared to face those challenges as free girls and women.

While enrolled in our programs, survivors have the opportunity to reengage their education, either in school or skills training. Last month, a survivor from Uganda said, “Now I have hope. I have learned more about God, and I have a skill (tailoring)!”