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Makeup can be a tool for liberation and expression.
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It can make us feel beautiful, but one of beauty's most popular ingredients has a dark side.
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When children are the hidden cost in our cosmetics.
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Who's stepping in to help them out?
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And who's leaving them behind.
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We're here in London on a press trip with Lush Cosmetics.
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The British company invited us here to learn about an initiative surrounding one of the
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most controversial ingredients going into makeup today.
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Mica.
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An unassuming mineral essential to modern life.
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The property of heat and electrical resistance makes this mineral invaluable.
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For decades it's been used in everyday products like electronics, insulation, paint, and even toothpaste.
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But over the past few years the cosmetics industry's demand for glowing radiant shimmer
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has exploded.
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From the perfect, no makeup makeup gleam, to the blinding shine of a highlighter created
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for double taps.
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Mica is often a magic ingredient.
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But it also has an ugly side.
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The majority of the world's mica comes from India, where 2016 Thomson Reuters Foundation
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investigation revealed that it was being mined by children and had a deadly cost.
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The revelation forced the beauty industry into a moral reckoning.
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Some companies have pledged to work with the mining communities in India to create a sustainable
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supply chain.
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It's a lofty goal.
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With progress that's been slow to come by.
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Companies like Lush that have built a brand on ethical sourcing have taken a different approach.
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Without a transparent supply chain, it decided to pull out of natural mica altogether.
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This glittering shimmery effect is all the synthetic mica.
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It looks pretty but I'm about to find out that it's more complicated than appearances
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might suggest.
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Much as I love sparkles, I didn't want anything put into a Lush product that you
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know could have had a death attached to it.
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The nice thing about the synthetic mica is it has much more variety of the this sparkle
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that you can get in the pigment.
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So really there's no reason to have natural mica.
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It's much more complicated in that natural mica that's a commodity which is in almost
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any product you use.
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You should not try to avoid mica.
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You should make sure that the families where you buy the mica from as a company get decent
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wages get living wages.
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As corporations roll out initiatives with promises of positive change.
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I'm curious to know how they're actually impacting the people and especially the children on
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the ground.
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Globally the mica industry is worth over half a billion dollars.
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And India is at its center with the world's largest and highest quality reserves of mica.
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The majority of it can be found in the country's eastern states.
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We're leaving New Delhi and we're about to take a sleeper train to a region called Jarkan.
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Which is where a lot of this mining is happening.
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Jharkhand is a mining state with rich reserves of coal, copper, and of course mica.
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Most of the nearly 33 million residents live in rural areas where illegal and unregulated
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mica mines dominate the trade.
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It's been this way since the 1980s when restrictive environmental laws drove the industry underground.
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It's been a very long journey and we're trying to keep a low profile.
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Just because this is such a sensitive subject here.
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Now many of the mines are abandoned and scavenged, while others are run by illicit operators.
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We're finally getting close because you can see all of the shimmer in the dirt.
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It's the first time I've ever seen pretty dirt.
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I met up with Rohit Gandhi our local contact who secured our access to the mine.
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Nice to meet you.
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Very nice to meet you as well.
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I'm gonna keep the cars ready just in case any of these contractors who actually mined
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with these children come around.
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We should be ready to leave right away.
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Why would they be mad that we're here?
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They know it's illegal right to use children in the trade for mining then obviously they're
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against the law.
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Just a few steps off the road.
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I start to see them.
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Children.
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Hard at work, mining for mica.
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They sifted through up here.
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It's all mixed with gravel, and then they'll sift it through and they'll take the mica out
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and that then go and sell to somebody who will then you know shipped overseas.
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Pooja Bhurla is only 11 years old and has been mining mica since she was eight.
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How many days are you out here per week?
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Every day?
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Do you ever get scared when you're working in the mines?
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Yes.
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Where are your parents right now?
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Jharkhand suffers from a classic case of the resource curse.
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A phenomenon where areas with abundant resources tend to be worse off for it thanks to government
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corruption, and commercial exploitation.
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Despite the fact that this area is rich in mica and other minerals,
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Jharkhand has one of the highest poverty rates in the entire country.
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Many of these children including Pooja make less than a quarter a day.
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But it can mean the difference between something to eat and an empty stomach.
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What are the other children in the town doing?
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It's been estimated that up to 20,000
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children are working all across the region in mines just like these.
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Seeing these mines and meeting these children it's easy to understand why Lush wouldn't
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want anything to do with mica.
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This is incredibly scary and I can't even believe there's kids all the way down there.
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But it's also painfully clear that these children have no alternative.
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Can you tell me how old you were when you first started working in the mines?
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If you didn't have to mine, what would you be doing today?
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Do you have any idea where the mica goes after you mine it?
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Wait someone's...who's coming?
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We had to take off really quickly from that mine because we heard that people were coming
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cause they knew that we were there.
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The mica trade here is built on a facade that it's players have a stake in maintaining.
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Once the mica leaves the mine, it's funneled into a process that conceals the fact that
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children ever had anything to do with it.
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Traders pedal the mica to intermediaries who often sell it under the licence of a legal
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mine from another part of the country.
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By the time the mica is exported, its illicit origins have been stripped away.
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But back in Jharkhand, it's impossible to escape the realities of the trade and the
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risks that go along with it.
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Cuts and broken bones.
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Respiratory illnesses that can damage or even scar the lungs.
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And sometimes, the unthinkable.
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Surma Kumari and her sister Laksmi were mining one day when the tunnel they were working
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in collapsed.
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Can you show me where you got hurt in the accident?
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Do you and your family still work in the mines?
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The Kumari Family story is a common one.
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Lakshmi's death is just one of an estimated 10 to 20 deaths that occur every month.
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The unregulated nature of mica opens the door to dangerous work conditions and predatory pricing.
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Families are trapped in a cycle of poverty.
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How much would the companies that are buying the mica have to pay you to be able to send Pooja
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to school?
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To be able to completely change your life.
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It really hit home.
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For better or worse, the choices that companies and consumers make have the power to determine
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people's lives.
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It made me look at my beauty products in a totally new light.
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I've pulled out some of the products that I use every single day.
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There's mica in this.
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First ingredient.
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They all have mica in them.
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There's mica in all of these products.
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While I don't know if the mica in these products specifically came from a mine that
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used child labor, there's no transparency in any of these supply chains involved with
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these products.
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These families all rely upon these mines and they've been selling mica for a long time now.
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There has to be an ethical way to get mica out of the ground.
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There has to be an ethical way to treat these families and it's hard not to feel responsibility.
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I wanted to know where the Indian government was in all of this.
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It turns out, the National Commission for the Protection of Child Rights, or NCPCR has
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been aware of the issue since at least 2016, when its governing ministry lodged a complaint.
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When we reached out to them, they said they were conducting a survey to understand the
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scope of the problem, and sent us to the ministry that oversees their work.
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There is poverty and there is less spread of education in these interior areas and our
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ministry is making all efforts to see that child rights are protected.
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So we were just in Jharkhand and we saw children working in the mines that are young
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as five or six, but your department is the one that's surveying that.
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Is that enough that's being done?
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Actually we are not aware of any such survey that's currently being done, as you say.
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We have been told that this committee is doing the survey and that they're under your jurisdiction.
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How is that–
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We have not authorized it.
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As far as this ministry goes, the ministry of the women and child development, child
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labor is not exactly a mandate.
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It was alarming to realize that someone so high up at the ministry, seemingly knew so
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little about this dire issue.
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While solutions may be slow to come from the top, a movement on the ground is providing
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some hope.
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A model that's been coined “the child friendly village” is connecting parents
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to new income streams, so that their children don't have to work.
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So many kids.
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It's a concept piloted by the Kailash Satyarthi Children's Foundation.
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And it's working.
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More than 3,000 children have been rescued.
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More than three thousand children have been withdrawn from child labor.
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And they have been enrolled in school.
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Funding comes through government services and private business support, including beauty
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conglomerate Estee Lauder.
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We thought long and hard if we wanted to stay in Indian mica, if we wanted to move towards synthetic.
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And where we ultimately landed is that it's important for us to have a stake.
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And having a stake means we will continue to be there until this problem comes to a resolution.
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And it has been incredibly important to us to always start these initiatives with the
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community itself.
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It has been a long term process.
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And everybody has a role and responsibility to play in addressing this whole issue.
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This gathering of child friendly villages is a showcase of what's possible when companies
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stay invested in the communities they work with.
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Thank you.
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I feel very welcomed right now.
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My name is Champa Kumari.
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Champa.
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Lovely to meet you.
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Champa Kumari is part of the most important and inspiring outcomes of these child friendly
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villages.
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The Child Parliament.
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At 14 years old, she's a fierce champion of illiminating child labor.
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What would you say to some of the companies and consumers who are buying mica that come
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from child labor.
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What do you want to accomplish next?
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You want to become a teacher?
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Yeah.
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You're a big picture thinker.
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I like it.
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Yeah.
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Promising to be mica free isn't the only, or even the best, answer.
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Mica is the lifeblood of this region, and any solution that
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will make a real difference must acknowledge that.
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It's empowering kids, like Pooja and Champa, that will bring change and break the cycle
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that keeps this region and its children chained to mica.
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