India is
home to some 14 million modern-day slaves, nearly half the total worldwide,
according to a newly compiled index. Experts say more aggressive laws need to
be passed and enforced to tackle this 'shameful' issue.
"I
have been working in a quarry, cutting stones from the raw rock for more than
16 years. I am not happy with this work. My wife also works with me making
Rs.60 to 90 (USD 1 to 1.50) a day. We get skin problems, colds and coughs. Our
eyes also get infected. We also suffer from back pain and joint pain."
These are
the words of 31-year-old Kishan, a quarry worker in India, describing to
Anti-Slavery International, a UK-based human rights organization, the
conditions he and his family are forced to work in just to make ends meet in a
country that has been registering remarkable growth rates over the past two
decades.
Forced
labor may not be at the center of global media attention, but it is the most
extensive form of slavery today, with an estimated 21 million people worldwide
coerced into working against their will under the threat of some sort of
punishment, according to the Geneva-based International Labor Organization
(ILO). Although estimates on the scale of the problem vary, experts agree that
such conditions are widespread in South Asia, particularly in India which is
believed to account for the vast majority of cases.
Trapped in
a vicious circle
Kishan's
story provides an insight into one of the most predominant forms of modern
slavery today: debt bondage. The little pay the 31-year-old and his wife
receive leaves them with no other choice but to borrow money from the quarry
owners to cover basic expenses. But in doing so, they become trapped in a cycle
where people are forced to sell their labor for no or meager wages to repay
their loans or other debts.
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| Millions of people in India are coerced into working against their will under the threat of some sort of punishment |
Poverty and
a lack of alternate opportunity combined with threats of physical and sexual
violence force many of the workers to stay with their "masters."
"The quarry owners sometimes ridicule and even beat us, if we are unable
to repay the loan. We are poor and illiterate, so where can we go?" Kishan
said.
Although
officially abolished by the Indian government almost four decades ago, the
practice of debt bondage remains prevalent in India, especially in rural areas.
Agriculture, domestic work, construction, manufacturing and entertainment are
believed to be among the sectors most concerned.
Products of
forced labor
In Kishan's
case, the debt bondage is not only limited to himself and his wife, but also
extends to his children, something not uncommon in the world's second-most
populous country, where child labor is used in the domestic service as well as
in the production of a variety of goods.
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| Children such as Kishan's are forced to work to repay the debt owed by their parents |
Extreme
poverty combined with a lack of access to land ownership and formal credit
markets for the most disadvantaged are just some of the factors driving this
form of exploitation.
The problem
is only exacerbated by India's centuries-old hierarchical caste system, affecting
tens of millions of people who belong to the so-called "lower" castes
or Dalits and the indigenous communities (Adivasis).
Half of the
world's slaves
The newly
released "Global Slavery Index," published on October 18 by the Walk
Free Foundation, lists India as the country with by far the most "modern
slaves" worldwide, with an estimated nearly 14 million, followed by China
(2.9 million) and Pakistan (2.1 million). According to the Australia-based
organization, India exhibits "the full spectrum of different forms of
modern slavery," ranging from severe forms of inter-generational bonded
labor to forced and servile marriage, the worst forms of child labor and
commercial sexual exploitation.
A recent
report by the US State Department states that India has also become a
destination and transit country for sex trafficking, with an ever-growing
number of job placement agencies luring adults and children under false
promises of employment. The 2013 Trafficking in Persons Report cites accounts
of women and girls from northeastern states and Odisha being sold or coerced
into forced marriages in states with skewed gender ratios, some of whom were
"subsequently forced into prostitution or labor by their new
families."
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| India has become a hub for sex trafficking, with more and more women and children being lured under false promises |
The US
government puts the total number of children victimized by commercial sexual
exploitation in India at 1.2 million. The Indian Ministry of Labor and
Employment did not reply to DW's requests to comment on the issue.
'Laws are
rarely enforced'
While New
Delhi has taken some important measures to tackle the issue such as outlawing
bonded labor, it has failed to effectively implement them. "India has
several laws on the books, major Supreme Court judgments, and governmental
structures in place to combat slavery, but the unfortunate reality is that the
laws are rarely enforced.
India has
simply not made a concerted and sustained effort to protect its most vulnerable
populations and to stamp out numerous modes of exploitation including
slavery," Kara explained.
On the
issue of child labour Madhura Swaminathan, economics professor at the Indian
Statistical Institute, underlines that although New Dehli has banned child
labor in hazardous industries, it still allows minors to work in other sectors.
Moreover, the country has yet to sign the ILO convention on the minimum age of
employment, which requires nations to abolish child labor.
Will New
Delhi ignore the findings?
Swaminathan
believes the only way to end this practice is by making good quality schooling
available to all children and views agrarian reforms as crucial to eliminate
other forms of exploitation such as bonded labor. "Without land and
accompanying social reforms in rural areas, the roots of unfree practices such
as caste-based exclusion cannot be wiped out," she told DW.
Analysts,
however, point out that these problems are not limited to India as they are
also prevalent in other South Asian countries such as Pakistan, Nepal and
Bangladesh.
"In
fact, one could reasonably say that India has done more than most of its
neighbors to tackle slavery and child labor, but much more aggressive laws need
to be passed and enforced to tackle the immense scale of the problem,"
Kara said, adding that many in India will no doubt be shamed by these numbers,
but many in the government and certainly in the private sector will probably
just ignore the findings of the newly released index.




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