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This is simply bonded labour.
While the working environment sucks, nobody is forcing them to work there. In fact, thousands are still eager to work at that place since it pays better than elsewhere. It's not like they were chained up. Foxconn actually has a very high turnover rate. Since they employ over 500 thousand people, there's bound to be suicides just from statistics alone.
I had a discussion on this subject with ''below freezing'' and ''fly2012'' they gave me enough information about this factory. They actually improved their working conditions and has one of the highest paying unskilled labour jobs in China...
And there were enough thread about this subject I can't understand why you find it neccacery ro open a new thread about this while you could easily post this into those threads...
Götterdämmerung;2628403 said:How is that bonded labour? The workers can leave the factory whenever they want, unlike in India where millions are still suffering under the hereditary bondage system.
Stop the Bull$hit. Where did you get that the millions are suffering in India? Unlike in India, where bonded labour is unlawful, in China, your government encourages companies like Foxconn to practise bonded labour openly. We know how China has acquired its wealth -through the blood and sweat of the bonded workers working in companies such as Foxconn
Child labour in India
The problem of child labour exploitation is a major challenge to the progress of developing countries. Children work at the cost of their right to education which leaves them permanently trapped in the poverty cycle, sadly without the education and literacy required for better-paying jobs. This is particularly serious in India as it tops the list with the highest number of child labourers in the world. The 2001 national census of India estimated the total number of child labour, aged 5–14, to be at 17 million.[1] Out of the 12.6 million, 0.12 million engages in hazardous job. However, according to informal labour force statistics, the problem seems to be more severe than reflected. Child labour is estimated to be as large as 60 million in India, as many children are "hidden workers" working in homes or in the underground economy.[2] In the long run, this phenomenon will evolve to be both a social and an economic problem as economic disparities widen between the poor and educationally backward states and that of the faster-growing states. India has the highest number of labourers in the world under 14 years of age.[3]
Although the Constitution of India guarantees free and compulsory education to children between the age of 6 to 14 and prohibits employment of children younger than 14 in 18 hazardous occupations and 65 hazardous processes,[4][5] child labour is prevalent in almost all informal sectors of the Indian economy.[6] Companies including Gap,[7] Primark,[8] Monsanto[9] and others have been criticised for using child labour in either their operations in India or by their suppliers in India.
Bonded child labour in India
The worst form of child labours would probably be bonded labour.[citation needed] It refers to children who are “sold” by their parents for a petty sum, a loan or to pay off debts.[16] A form of long run employer-slave relationship is formed when these children are tied to this debt bondage to work for their employers for a time period that could be stretched to a lifetime, and usually it is for a minimal or no wages.[17] There has been no universally accepted number of bonded child labourers in India, but one estimate in 2000 shows that there were 15 million child labourers who were bonded.[18] Bonded child labour is practiced widely across many parts of rural India and across multiple industries.
Though bondage is illegal in India and initiatives have been taken to stop bonded child labours, little has been achieved. Both Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1976 and Child Labour (Prohibition & Regulation) Act, 1986, have done little to help the bonded child labourers as the employers tend to use the loopholes and ambiguity in the act to their advantage. Also, there was a lack of will from the government to enforce the acts.[19] Despite having large number of bonded labourers identified, very few employers got prosecuted and even fewer got convicted.[20] According to the Ministry of Labour’s figures, between 2000 and 2002 in all of India, there were only around 1800 bonded labourers being identified and released; and another around 17300 bonded labourers rehabilitated. However, there was no data showing how many children labourers are among those being freed.[20]
References
^ a b c "National Child Labour project". Ministry of Labour and Employment, Government of India. Retrieved 2011-09-12.
^ "Children In India- The statistics". Friends of Salaam Baalak Trust UK (FoSBT). Retrieved 2011-09-20.
^ "India- The big picture". UNICEF. Retrieved 2009-10-19.
^ Child Labour
^ http://labour.nic.in/cwl/ListHazardous.htm
I agree with you mate child labour is a serious issue, but the chinese do need to improve their labour law.I think Indians here need to stop with useless whining. There are millions of Indians who are still
under poverty line.
Most of the Indians who respond to posts here ,can afford to pay their Internet bills ,are obviously
financially well off.
Think about a average Rickshaw driver in India who cannot even make 3000 rs( 60 $) in a month .
If Someone like him can make a minimum of (20000 rs) 400 $ on unskilled labor ,then I would say that's a pretty good deal , at least it puts food on the your table.