The true impact of our work is not fully captured in numbers. Reliable global data on child sexual exploitation is limited, fragmented, and often hidden. What we see is only a fraction of what is happening.
What we can measure is this:
When one child is freed, an entire family is restored. Parents are reunited with their child. Siblings regain safety. Hope returns to households that had lost everything.
Beyond families, entire communities are affected. Every rescue, every investigation, every arrest sends a signal: this is no longer tolerated.
In many cities where we operate, we see a clear shift. Child exploitation is no longer visible on the streets in the way it once was. In places like Mumbai, children can no longer be found openly in brothels or public areas.
That matters.
Because when children become harder to find, they also become harder to exploit.
This does not mean the problem is solved. It remains vast — and is increasingly shifting into digital environments.
But it does mean that progress is real.
We are not only rescuing children. We are disrupting criminal networks, increasing the risk for perpetrators, and changing the systems that allow exploitation to exist.
And in some cases, survivors themselves become part of that change — rebuilding their lives and, in time, helping to shape a future where exploitation is no longer possible.
Every donation directly funds rescue operations, investigations, legal proceedings and long-term survivor care.