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Child labour: India’s hidden shame

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February 2014 Last updated at 00:09 GMT
Child labour: India’s hidden shame
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By Shilpa KannanBBC News, Delhi
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The law in India is vague on when children can legally work
Rescued from forced employment, 13-year-old Lakshmi is frail and frightened.

Two child protection officers hold her on either side as she walks into the police station.

She was abducted four years ago from her village in north-east India.

Until her rescue, she had been working in people's homes across West Delhi - cooking, cleaning and taking care of children.

"I was not allowed to rest," she says. "If I did something wrong or it was not what they wanted, they hit me.

"If I wanted to sit down for a bit because I was so tired, they would scream at me.

"I was never allowed to leave the house, so I didn't realise that I'm in Delhi. My employers told me that we are in Madras in South India."
As the police and counsellors question her, Lakshmi breaks down. She tells the police that she was sexually assaulted by the men who kidnapped her.

She was threatened that if she told anyone about it, they would tell everyone back home in her village and her honour would be destroyed.

And then, when she started working the agent who arranged her work withheld all her wages leaving her with nothing.

'Lured with clothes and sweets'
Her uncle is just relieved to have found her. A tea garden worker from Assam, he says her parents died when she was young and her grandmother is worried sick about the young girl. He is also angry about the abduction.

"What can we really do? We are poor people - I didn't have enough money to come to Delhi to look for my missing niece.

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Kailash Satyarthi (left) is helping families look for their missing daughters
"Unscrupulous agents and middlemen just come into our homes when parents are away working at the tea gardens and lure young girls with new clothes and sweets. Before they know it, they are on a train to a big city at the mercy of these greedy men."

He is not alone. One child goes missing every eight minutes in India and nearly half of them are never found.

Kidnapped children are often forced into the sex trade. But many here feel that children are increasingly pushed into domestic labour - hidden from public view within the four walls of a home.

The government estimates half a million children are in this position.

Demand from middle classes
At a rehabilitation home in northern Delhi run by a charity for children, Bachpan Bachao Andolan, many families have gathered.

Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote
I don't want anyone to go through what I did”

Sumila Munda
They are all tea workers from the north-east state of Assam and have come here searching for their missing daughters.

They estimate that just from one particular area - Rangpura in Assam - 16 girls have been lost in the last three to four years.

Helping these families find their daughters is Kailash Satyarti, the head of Bachpan Bacchao Andolan.

"This is the most ironical part of India's growth. The middle classes are demanding cheap, docile labour," he says.

"The cheapest and most vulnerable workforce is children - girls in particular. So the demand for cheap labour is contributing to trafficking of children from remote parts of India to big cities."

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'Hellish life'
Offering them a ray of hope is the case of 18-year-old Sumila Munda, who was rescued earlier this month. The information she provided led to police arresting a couple of alleged traffickers.

She says she still has nightmares about her employers.

"I don't want anyone to go through what I did. I often wondered if I will ever escape from the hellish life I was stuck in. I had dreams of being in school, studying. Now I will get back to my studies."

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Sumila Munda was recently rescued
India is estimated to have more child labourers than anywhere else in the world.

But while abducting children is illegal, the law is vague on when they can legally work. Child labour law does not allow children under the age of 14 to be employed, but anyone under 18 is legally considered a child.

Government helpless
And the government body in charge of children's rights admits they are helpless.

"Unfortunately our child labour prohibition and regulation act is totally outdated," says Kushal Singh, head of the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights.

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Kushal Singh says the law needs to change
"It says children below the age of 14 cannot be employed in hazardous occupations. Does that mean in non-hazardous occupations a two-year-old child can be employed?

"So obviously it's a very regressive act. This issue has been raised and now an amendment is pending in the parliament. However, it has been pending for a very long time."

If the law changes, it will make the fight against child exploitation a little easier.

But that's no relief for families like these. Many here fear that their daughters may be lost forever.

You can hear more on this story on The World Tonight on BBC Radio Four at 22:00 GMT, or listen again on iPlayer.

*Some names in this report have been changed to protect the identities of victims.

BBC News - Child labour: India’s hidden shame
 
Child labour is a shame indeed, but India should not be the only one to be ashamed. Here are the worst ten countries and India is not on the list. Let's hope all these countries feel the shame too.

The 10 worst countries for child labor - CNN.com
This list is propaganda against all the countries who are against USA foreign policy
Child labour is worse in india than Pakistan ..

Over 60 million child laborers in India!

Child labour in India | indiafacts.in

Findings on the Worst Forms of Child Labor - India

Child Labor Facts
  • One in six children 5 to 14 years old — about 16 percent of all children in this age group — is involved in child labor in developing countries.
  • In the least developed countries, 30 percent of all children are engaged in child labor.
  • Worldwide, 126 million children work in hazardous conditions, often enduring beatings, humiliation and sexual violence by their employers.
  • An estimated 1.2 million children — both boys and girls — are trafficked each year into exploitative work in agriculture, mining, factories, armed conflict or commercial sex work.
  • The highest proportion of child laborers is in sub-Saharan Africa, where 26 percent of children (49 million) are involved in work.
Child Labour in India - Issues and Concerns
 
This list is propaganda against all the countries who are against USA foreign policy
Child labour is worse in india than Pakistan ..

Lady,
by your logic, Pakistan should not have been on that list and India should have been. You are better friends of the US and its policies.

BTW, do not turn this into India-Pakistan thing.
 
Lady,
by your logic, Pakistan should not have been on that list and India should have been. You are better friends of the US and its policies.

BTW, do not turn this into India-Pakistan thing.
you missed the point here, Pakistan is always in USA media as a target ... there is not a single report from US media which is bad and Pakistan is not included in it ...
 
you missed the point here, Pakistan is always in USA media as a target ... there is not a single report from US media which is bad and Pakistan is not included in it ...


I could say the same about BBC. So many countries involved in child labour and the BBC finds only India?
 
I don't think so. It is a matter of shame to all of us, irrespective of what country we belong to.

The west talk about child labour but fails to see the realities.

You cant ask a starving family to send kids to Harvard
 
This list is propaganda against all the countries who are against USA foreign policy
Child labour is worse in india than Pakistan ..

Over 60 million child laborers in India!

Child labour in India | indiafacts.in

Findings on the Worst Forms of Child Labor - India

Child Labor Facts
  • One in six children 5 to 14 years old — about 16 percent of all children in this age group — is involved in child labor in developing countries.
  • In the least developed countries, 30 percent of all children are engaged in child labor.
  • Worldwide, 126 million children work in hazardous conditions, often enduring beatings, humiliation and sexual violence by their employers.
  • An estimated 1.2 million children — both boys and girls — are trafficked each year into exploitative work in agriculture, mining, factories, armed conflict or commercial sex work.
  • The highest proportion of child laborers is in sub-Saharan Africa, where 26 percent of children (49 million) are involved in work.
Child Labour in India - Issues and Concerns

ha ha ha...
another disillusioned pakistani post......
everything what the media say become propaganda against pakistan but still pakistani want to settle and earn in west which sets propaganda against the home country.....and every thing what media says against India become beacon of truth for pakistanis......:lol::lol::lol:

Child labour in Pakistan
I WOULD like to invite the attention of the authorities concerned towards child labour in Pakistan. It is equally frustrating that child labour, considered to be one of the core issues of Pakistan, is being neglected by the government.
Hence, the rate of child labour has perked up to a large amount.
According to the national child labor survey, approximately 3.3 million children below 14 years are working as a labour in Pakistan. This includes both boys and girls — boys form 73 pc and the girls 27 pc of the child labour.
This scenario depicts how moderate Pakistani parents are letting their children to work as labourers in order to earn money and survive in this world.
As a result, the majority of children works overtime for Rs 50 to Rs100, which seems a matter of grave concern. What is required is that the government must take a step to solve this issue.
Child labour in Pakistan - DAWN.COM


here ...article from Human right asia...

PAKISTAN: Child labor -- Who are the ultimate losers?
November 7, 2013
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According to the International Labor Organization (ILO), "Child labor refers to the employment of children in any work that deprives children of their childhood, interferes with their ability to attend regular school, and that is mentally, physically, socially or morally dangerous and harmful".

Child labor has been a persistent problem throughout the South Asia, for a very long time. Endemic poverty, lack of employment opportunities for adults, large family size and the absence of strict laws, especially regarding the enforcement of a minimum age for work, and their implementation are some of the major reasons for the abhorrent child labor practice seen in the region, including Pakistan.

There is no denying that the involvement of children in labor is a blatant violation of their rights; additionally, child labor also restricts opportunities of educational attainment for children, and thus limits their options for future development.

A child's earnings are usually the prime reason to send them to work at an age when they ought to be at school. In general there is a widespread assumption that their income contributes significantly to the family's income.

Research has recently been conducted to understand the contributions of children's work in relation to the overall family income. Additionally, the research tried to ascertain the real beneficiaries and losers of the whole phenomenon of child labor.

The Author headed the research, while the research team was comprised of the staff and volunteers of Social Research and Development Organization (SRDO), a Karachi-based NGO.

A multi-disciplinary and scientific research approach was applied to conduct the study. Interviews with children, their parents, their employers and common people were organized to collect the data.

The research team targeted 100 working children, 50 boys and 50 girls. It is important to mention that all the respondents of the research were engaged in the services sector.

International Labor Organization (ILO) distributes child labor into three branches of economic activity including the agriculture sector (60%), the services sector (25.6%), and the industrial sector (7.0%). Around 7.5% children's field of economic activity is not defined.

According to the findings of the research, a large majority of male children are in the age group of 10 to 13 years (69.32%) followed by those in the age group of 14 to 17 (20.44%) and below to 10 years old (9.11%). While a large majority of female children belong to the age group of 12 to 15 years (73.23%) followed by those below the age group of 11 years old (16.78) and a small section of 16 to 18 years (8.86%).

In order to get the perception of the common people about child labor, the research team had asked several questions of the common people to get their point of view about the issue. While responding to a question regarding the family background of child labourers, a large number of people responded that the death of the father is the major cause of children's involvement in work with a view to support his or her family.

The research team, therefore, focused on the family background of the children and it was informed that 72.36% of male respondents have both parents alive, while 15.24% have single mothers and 10.11% have single fathers. The research findings further informed that 75.06% of female respondents have both parents alive, while 13.33% have single mothers and 9.98% have single fathers. One male and one female respondent informed that both of their parents had passed away and they were living with their relatives.

The research team targeted male children working in different fields and it was revealed that 28.12% of respondents are engaged in working on small hotels or tea stalls, 27.59% work in grocery stores, 19.42% are engaged in working with fruit or vegetable shops, 14.78% work in motorbike mechanic shops and 11.03% work in flower shops.

The research team also observed the trends among female children working in different economic activities. The study found an overwhelmingly majority of female children 92.11% work as domestic workers while 7.89% are involved in miscellanies economic activities such as selling different items in markets.

The research team also tried to find out the overall income of a family. 32% of the respondents informed that there family income is Rs. 9000/= or more, while 28.44% believed family income is Rs. 7500/= or more, 21.56% said Rs. 6000/= or more and 17.45% said Rs. 4000/= or more. It is pertinent to mention here that the father of all respondents do manual labor work which is low paid and lacks consistency.

Female child domestic servants work on low salaries and a majority of respondents (55.34%) receive Rs. 1200/= for their whole month labor. 19.57% respondents get Rs. 1500/= per month, 14.24% receive Rs. 1800/= and 10.77% receive Rs. 2000/= as their one month salary. One of the respondent informed that she received Rs. 2500/= as her monthly salary.

Male child laborers also work on low wages and they receive their wages on a daily basis rather than a monthly salary. In case of any holiday, these child laborers are not entitled to get any wages from their employer. 23.46% respondents work on Rs. 50/= per day, 31.11% receive Rs. 60/= per day, 26.92% Rs. 80/= per day, 12.21% receive Rs. 100 per day and 6.08% receive Rs. 120 per day as their daily wages.

One may wonder that why parents send their children to work for a minimal amount? The research revealed that the contribution children income in overall family income varies from 10% to 35%. It was disclosed that in some families a minimal contribution of Rs. 50/= per day counts a lot in family income.

It was quite clear that majority of parents are aware of the importance of education; however, these parents were of the view that children's work is necessary for the survival of their families. Additionally, many parents pointed out the prevailing unemployment among educated people in the country and remarked that it is better for the future of their children to start work at an initial stage of their life.

Working children have been a reality in all poor and developing countries, including Pakistan, for many, many years. The research found that employers and working conditions of male and female children are quite different from each other. Girls are primarily employed in domestic work while boys work for small businesses.

The research disclosed that employers of child laborers prefer to hire them due to three basic reasons: 1. Children work, more or less, equal to an adult but for a lesser salary as compared to the adults; 2. Children are more obedient than adult men or women and seldom retaliate; 3. Children are easier to control during working hours.

It was interesting to note that a majority of employers are getting the benefits of child labor; however, they considered such act as charity or helping poor children. Some of the employers mentioned that they only hired the child because he/she belongs to very poor family and despite the low quality of child's work they give a "handsome amount", only to "help" him/her.

The parents and employers of working children tried to explain that their act, either sending the child for work or hiring the child for work, is in the broader interest of the child. However, none of them had realized that child labor seriously minimize children's chances to enjoy and develop their lives.

Majority of child laborers have no access to any school or formal education system as they have fulltime work commitment. They, mostly, do not receive proper food and healthcare; therefore they have generally poor health. These children have no or limited career development chances while they are also vulnerable to violence, abuse, neglect and discrimination.

Parents are primarily responsible for taking care of their children and there is no point that child, as young as five or six, have to work and contribute in family's income. Parents should increase the family size only after carefully examining their financial resources rather than expecting the new arrival to work for his/her survival. And above all it's the responsibility of government to make and implement laws to discourage child labor while providing a social safety net at least for vulnerable parents living in abject poverty.

Similarly, employers should understand that children are not meant to work, even sometime for ten to fourteen hours. They, the employers, should hire adult men or women to work on a market based salary rather than hiring children to work fulltime in lesser salary.

Child labor is a complex issue in every part of world, including Pakistan. It is quite clear that everybody, especially parents and employers, are getting benefits of children involvement in labor; however, innocent children have always been the loser in this phenomenon.
PAKISTAN: Child labor -- Who are the ultimate losers? — Asian Human Rights Commission
 
Child labors hired by Great Indian Middle Class and abusing them openly.
Education indeed brought enlightenment to them:angel:
 

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