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  • SHAHANA BUTT: To promote the country for widespread tourist attraction across globe, India advertises

  • itself as "Incredible India". But how true this jingle is a big question for those who

  • are living here.

  • While the government claims it has succeeded in eradicating the problem, almost each day,

  • thousands of people, including children, in India are trapped, and very few are rescued

  • from the ages-old trap of forced labor in the country.

  • India, a secular democracy that promises its citizens equal rights, has failed big time.

  • While slavery has been abolished across the globe, here it exists in different forms,

  • like bonded labor and child labor.

  • Almost each day, newspapers and other media outlets publish stories of bonded laborers

  • set free, while the main political party, Congress, led by United Progressive Alliance,

  • claims it has eradicated the system of slave labor by introducing schemes and acts like

  • Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act.

  • To know more on this, The Real News Network talked to Swami Agnivesh.

  • Way back in 1980s, for the first time in India, a politician started a campaign against rampant

  • bonded labor system in the country, and till date his struggle continues.

  • Swami Agnivesh initiated Bandhua Mukti Morcha, or Bonded Labour Liberation Front, so as to

  • insist India to implement its laws for the safeguard of the labor class. Till date, the

  • organization has managed to rescue nearly 200,000 bonded laborers, who have later been

  • rehabilitated by the government.

  • SWAMI AGNIVESH: When I resigned as minister for education in 1979, I went straight to

  • the stone quarries very close to Delhi that is in Faridabad area, and also to some of

  • the brick kilns, where the laborers were bought and sold like chattel slavery. Then it was

  • a great shock for me that right under the nose of our federal parliament and federal

  • judiciary, Supreme Court of India, this practice was rampant.

  • When I got released, some of these bonded laborers from the stone quarries of this Faridabad

  • area, I wanted to get them back in their villages. So, unsuspecting, I requested for some help

  • INR 10,000 worth of help from the then chief minister, under whom I had already worked

  • as education minister.

  • But when I made that request, he was so furious. He threatened me with dire consequences. He

  • told me point blank that next time I step into any of the stone quarries or brick kilns

  • and come up with this bogie of bonded labor, I would not come alive--he would make sure

  • that I was killed.

  • So I couldn't understand what was the matter and why was he was so furious. Then I realized

  • that the whole industry, the substratum, agriculture industry, is surviving on the exploitation

  • of the cheapest source of slave labor, that is, bonded labor. So we started that movement.

  • BUTT: He gave us a brief glimpse into the reality of the many millions who continue

  • to toil in bondage in brick kilns, rice mills, rock quarries, agriculture, and various other

  • industries across the country.

  • The question to be asked is how these men become bonded laborers.

  • BHUWAN RIBU: In India, bonded labor today exists. The maximum numbers would be in agricultural

  • bondage. People will be taking a very small loan for little things in the village, for

  • example a medicine or somebody's marriage or somebody's birth or death, and the terms

  • of repayment of that loan will be such that a person would be required to pay interest,

  • which is simply not practical. And so the person will probably send a child or the person

  • will be forced to work himself. And this is the beginning of bonded labor in the agricultural

  • context.

  • The other aspects are places like brick kilns. Now in every brick kiln, nobody is registering

  • the brick kiln as per the mandate. Nobody is actually taking these people and providing

  • them with proper minimum wages. Some advance is paid to a middle man. The middle man brings

  • hundreds of people to work in the brick kilns. And all of them are kept in bonded labor,

  • at least till the season ends. They are not allowed to move. They are not paid minimum

  • wages. Nothing is happening. This is a very, very clear and in-front-of-you kind of a bonded

  • labor, but nobody's willing to act on it. With the construction boom, with the infrastructural

  • growth that the country's witnessing, the bricks are required by everyone. And yet nobody

  • is willing to actually go the distance and provide justice to the people who are making

  • those bricks.

  • The third kind of bonded labor is the bonded labor that arises out of children, trafficking.

  • And these are children who are brought. It is not inter-generational. But children are

  • made to work for six hours--sorry, six years, seven years because of a little bit of advance

  • that has been paid to their families.

  • So this is the situation. However, nobody's actually taking proper steps to enforce the

  • law and eliminate the system of bonded labor.

  • BUTT: The country has recently initiated minimum wages program for these labors, which is $2.30

  • for the work of one complete day that lasts for minimum ten hours. But for those working

  • as slaves, attaining $0.30 even is impossible.

  • Government officials in the Ministry of Labour estimate over 300,000 bonded laborers have

  • been rehabilitated in the 37 years since the act against forced labor was passed. These

  • data are based on the numbers of bonded laborers who have been able to avail of government

  • benefits after procuring release certificates. The data does not include the actual numbers

  • of people rescued from bondage, since many are unable to produce the necessary documents.

  • So this may be an underestimate.

  • The fact is it is really hard to establish the accurate data. That's why the current

  • government's claims to having abolished it are decidedly weak on this score. But why

  • has the government failed to abolish bonded labor?

  • AGNIVESH: The politicians are hand-in-glove with the moneybags. They care two hoots for

  • the condition of the laborers. And the laborers themselves are unorganized. They don't have

  • unions. Whatever little unions the organized sector had earlier to the globalization which

  • has set in, they have now been weakened, because the state does not want a strong trade-union

  • movement in the country, so that they can have more and more FDI (foreign direct investment)

  • and such other things inside the country. So that is their sort of objective or goal.

  • BUTT: Which means, on the one hand, India promotes itself as a liberal democracy to

  • improve its relations with the global economy, but on the other hand, it relies on bonded

  • labor to improve its relations with global economy and to encourage investments.

  • International Labour Organization, or ILO, estimates that in 2013, over 21 million people

  • across the world are trapped as forced labor. Of this, 11.7 million, or 56 percent, are

  • in the Asia-Pacific region. Is it possible, as the current government claims, that none

  • of them exists in India, the second-most populous country in the region?

  • TINE STAERMOSE: It really is important when we're talking about millions of people in

  • India and other countries that are like India around the world--we have this global estimate--is

  • that we need to understand the root causes and we need to address the root causes. So

  • you can have these approaches, or you can remove all the forced labor and prosecute

  • the employers, but you do not remove the root causes.

  • So our research, both globally but also here in India, helps us, together with our partners,

  • the government, the employers organizations, the trade unions, and other stakeholders to

  • understand what makes this happen. Why is this happening in different sectors, in different

  • states? And why doesn't it disappear with the modernization of the society in India?

  • BUTT: By definition, bonded laborers are denied freedom to leave their place of work and are

  • not allowed to work elsewhere by employers for a variety of reasons, past debts being

  • a key one. As a result, they're cut off from access to state or central government benefits

  • and schemes, such as the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, or NREGA, to which they are

  • entitled. They simply do not have the freedom to engage in such schemes.

  • The question remains: how can we help these laborers out of this mess?

  • AGNIVESH: First and foremost we need to guarantee national minimum wage like in the United States

  • of America. You have a national minimum wage rate by hour. It used to be $7.25 per hour.

  • Recently President Obama and his government has increased it nationally to $9 per hour.

  • In our country it is even not that much--$9 for the whole day.

  • So this asymmetry in the wages in the First World, the Second World, and the third world,

  • this is a big, big, I think, challenge for all of us to consider. The whole world must

  • stand up for the rights of these most marginalized, the most voiceless people, the most exploited

  • people, and they should demand--American citizens included, I am saying, their trade unions

  • included, I'm saying--that there must be level playing field. The multinational companies

  • should not be allowed to exploit the cheap labor of a Third World country. See, that's

  • why they are shifting their base or whatever, whatever business, etc. They're looking for

  • cheap labor. What is this? They are looking for the cheapest source of labor. Cheapest

  • source is child labor. That means child slavery.

  • BUTT: For millions of those struggling hard to survive as slave laborers in India, independence

  • is yet to arrive. Experts believe the day India starts implementing its laws for the

  • benefit of its weaker section, which is more than 70 percent of country's population, in

  • that day India will actually achieve independence.

  • For The Real News Network, Shahana Butt in New Delhi.

SHAHANA BUTT: To promote the country for widespread tourist attraction across globe, India advertises

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