Google – AFP, Ammu Kannampilly (AFP), 21 February 2013
![]() |
Indian
child coal miners squat by a fire to keep warm inside a mine shaft in
Meghalaya
state, January 29, 2013 (AFP, Roberto Schmidt)
|
RYMBAI,
India — Thirteen-year-old Sanjay Chhetri has a recurring fear: that one day,
the dark, dank mine where he works will cave in and bury him alive.
Like
thousands of children in India's remote northeast, Chhetri begins work in the
middle of the night, ready to dig pits, squat through narrow tunnels and cut
coal shards.
At four
feet six inches, the skinny teenager is the perfect fit for a job in the
lucrative mining industry in Meghalaya state whose crudely-built rat-hole mines
are too small for most adults to enter.
Each day
Sanjay makes his way down a series of slippery ladders in the pitch-dark,
carrying two pickaxes, with a tiny flashlight strapped to his head.
Seven
months into the job, he still walks gingerly, taking care not to miss a step
and fall fifty metres (165 feet).
![]() |
Indian coal
miner, Surya Limu, stands near
the coal mine where he works in Rymbai village,
Meghalaya on January 29, 2013 (AFP, Roberto
Schmidt)
|
That's
where his nightmares begin.
"It's
terrifying to imagine the roof falling on me when I am working," he says.
Twelve
hours later, he will have earned 200 rupees ($4) for a day's work, more than
his parents make as labourers in the state capital Shillong.
The eldest
boy in a family of ten, Sanjay left school two years ago when his family could
no longer pay the bills.
"It's
very difficult work, I struggle to pull that wagon once I have filled it with
coal," he tells AFP.
As he
shivers in coal-stained jeans and flip-flops -- revealing wrinkled feet that
look like they belong to a much older man -- he says his parents constantly ask
him to return home to work with them.
But he
isn't ready to leave the mines yet.
"I
need to save money so I can return to school. I miss my friends and I still
remember school. I still have my old dreams," he says.
Mine
manager Kumar Subba says children like Sanjay turn up in droves outside
Meghalaya's coal mines, asking for work.
"New
kids are always showing up here. And they lie about their age, telling you they
are 20 years old when you can see from their faces that they are much, much
younger," he tells AFP.
Baby-faced
Surya Limu is among the most recent recruits to join Subba's team in Rymbai
village.
Limu, who
claims he is 17, left his native Nepal for Meghalaya when his father died in a
house fire, leaving behind a widow and two children.
Unlike his
more experienced colleagues, Limu moves slowly down the precarious mine steps,
his delicate features straining with the effort.
"Of
course I feel scared but what can I do? I need money, how else can I stay
alive?," he tells AFP.
Child
labour is officially illegal in India, with several state laws making the
employment of anyone under 18 in a hazardous industry a non-bailable offence.
Furthermore,
India's 1952 Mines Act prohibits coal companies from hiring anyone under 18 to
work inside a mine.
Meghalaya,
however, has traditionally been exempt due to its special status as a
northeastern state with a significant tribal population.
This means
that in certain sectors like mining, customary laws overrule national
regulations. Any land owner can dig for coal in the state, and prevailing laws
do not require them to put any safety measures in place.
According
to the Shillong-based non-profit, Impulse NGO Network, some 70,000 children are
currently employed in Meghalaya's mines, with several thousand more working at
coal depots.
"The
mine owners find it cheaper to extract coal using these crude, unscientific
methods and they find it cheaper to hire children. And the police take bribes
to look the other way," Rosanna Lyngdoh, an Impulse activist, told AFP.
After
decades of unregulated mining, the state is due to enforce its first-ever
mining policy later this year.
The draft
legislation instructs mine owners not to employ children, but it does allow
rat-hole mining to continue.
"As
long as they allow rat-hole mining, children will always be employed in these
mines, because they are small enough to crawl inside," Lyngdoh said.
Accidents
and quiet burials are commonplace, with years of uncontrolled drilling making
the rat-holes unstable and liable to collapse at any moment.
According
to Gopal Rai, who lives with seven other miners in an eight by ten feet
tarpaulin-covered bamboo and metal shack, compensation is rarely, if ever, paid
to injured children.
The
17-year-old spends his wages on clothes, mobile phone downloads and a
fortnightly schedule of spiky "Korean-influenced" haircuts.
"Some
days I feel all right, on other days it's a little difficult to breathe,"
Rai said, a saffron and black scarf wrapped around his neck.
He sees no
reason to visit a doctor.
"What's
the point? Anyway, when I leave home for work I have no idea if I will come
back alive."


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