Saturday, 19 October 2013

Child Labour

The preamble to India’s constitution states that India is a democratic country. It guarantees us Justice, Liberty, Equality and Fraternity in a Sovereign, Socialist, Secular, Democratic, Republic. The preamble officially promised all these on the 26th day of November, 1949. The constitution gave us fundamental rights which include the Right against Exploitation. But do these utopian promises make any sense to that waif rushing with tea to a customer who abuses him even for the slightest delay?
The truth is not simple and sweet. Globalized India has, as some point out, made the difference between rich and poor come out in the open as never before. Pre-globalization, India did not have as many village boys struggling for life in the city as the twenty-first century.
Unplanned industrial expansion at the cost of agricultural land, deforestation, equally unplanned and rampant, exploitation of groundwater resources in villages have made life in Indian villages difficult. Innumerable villages which depended on the forest for survival now find that the very source of their survival has been disappearing. They may not understand global warming but they do understand when their bread is taken away. The process began long ago. That started the migration of the village boy to the city in search of a better life.
But the lonely village boy in a big bad city seldom finds the ‘life’ he comes for. He ends up working long hours for meager wages. His poverty and need make him vulnerable to exploitation. Some children also work without any proper wages. This is against the law. Worse, you will also find children below the age of 14 engaged in work that is, to put it politely, dangerous.
According to our constitution, making children work without wages and making children aged below 14 work in mines, factories and other dangerous places is illegal. The truth, however, is that in every nook and corner of Indian cities, one can find boys and girls as young as six doing all kinds of jobs for any small remuneration. Being physically weak, they have to bear a lot of verbal and physical abuse within and without their workplace. At time things are worse and some die in circumstances as these.
No social security is active or proactive enough to check this. They are reactive on some rare occasions. But usually that does not solve the problem. You rescue fourteen boys between ages of 7 and 14 working in a tobacco factory and send them to a rehabilitation center. Within two weeks, they prefer the freedom of the pavement life to the nauseating claustrophobia in a rehabilitating center.
Can we imagine the way they shall perceive the world? What if they decided to pay back to civilization what ‘civilization’ has given to them? Would you label these boys as criminals then? It is high time we recognized the gravity of the danger that stares society in the face if these kids prefer to labour in the world of crime for an extra rupee or two!

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