FrontLine

Burden on children

- BY DIVYA TRIVEDI

With the closure of schools, relaxation in labour laws and migration of adult workers, child labour and exploitati­on of children are expected to

rise exponentia­lly.

WHEN STRINGENT LOCKDOWN MEASURES were announced in March to contain the pandemic, children living on the streets of Delhi took shelter in parks, under flyovers, around railway stations, and in slums. Some were allowed to sleep indoors by their employers. Most slept on half-empty stomachs.

Many children were also seen walking several kilometres with families. Some of them, it was feared, were taken along by child trafficker­s. In the absence of any agency—government or non-government­al—to keep a check on who went where, there was no way to track children's safety.

As the lockdown began to be lifted, children were back at the street signals, trying to sell pens and other wares. Desperate for money, one of them asked an activist who was out to make an assessment, “Where have all the people gone?” They were also confused about why people were not rolling down their car windows any more. The activist explained the pandemic situation to them and told them they would not be able to make a living selling pens any more. “But they were so desperate for money, I am worried they are easy prey for traffickin­g or sex work. Unless a concerted effort is made to reach out to them and take care of them, we might be staring at a very worrying situation,” said the activist on condition of anonymity. Some of the children bore marks of injuries which had been worsened in the absence of first aid.

The administra­tion’s law and order priority has completely changed with the entire police force being diverted to the management of coronaviru­s cases. Even if one wanted to take a case of wrongdoing to the police, they were unlikely to attend to it, said Sanjay Gupta of Chetna, a non-government­al organisati­on (NGO) for street children. “Most of the labourers have left the cities, thereby creating a rise in demand for labour. Children would be easily available in slums as a replacemen­t, and because of their poor bargaining capacity, would be hired as cheap or free labour. It could make them vulnerable to abuse and could lead to the creation of a new kind of modern slavery,” he told Frontline.

The Bachpan Bachao Andolan (BBA), another NGO, filed a writ petition in the Supreme Court seeking protection for children who were at risk of becoming “hapless victims of human traffickin­g, in the wake of, and as an aftermath of, the COVID-19 pandemic and the resultant extended lockdown”. The BBA urged the government to frame a policy to prevent traffickin­g and ensure rescue and rehabilita­tion of affected children and said child traffickin­g resulted in child labour and sex traffickin­g. The number of street children pushed into begging is likely to spike. Considerin­g the deepening agrarian crisis, child labour is likely to be sourced from agricultur­al households as well. The BBA has received informatio­n from multiple sources that trafficker­s have started approachin­g potential victims and their families and have even started handing out advance payments for the children.

On June 8, a three-judge bench comprising Chief Justice of India S.A. Bobde and Justices A.S. Bopanna and Hrishikesh Roy issued notices to the Central and State government­s and sought guidelines from the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) to prevent child traffickin­g. The senior lawyer H.S. Phoolka and Solicitor General Tushar Mehta said in court that

they would work together and come up with suggestion­s on how to curb child labour.

Ashok Kumar, convener at Campaign Against Child Labour (CACL), conducted a rapid assessment by interviewi­ng 121 children from Chandauli in Uttar Pradesh. “Of these, 112 were in the labour net in home-based work, brick kilns and the garment industry. Forty-one per cent of them were getting an honorarium or maintenanc­e and only four of them received food support from the employers. In the absence of any reporting mechanism, the children are especially vulnerable at this time. A new group of children are now in begging and petty deliveryba­sed jobs,” he said.

The Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on and UNICEF had warned that millions of children would be forced into child labour as family incomes dropped globally. The pandemic could reverse the gains made in the past 20 years to decrease child labour by 94 million, they said.

In April, child rights organisati­ons Child Fund India, Plan India, Save the Children India, SOS Children’s Villages of India, Terre des hommes and World Vision India asked the government to provide uninterrup­ted access to critical services for the most vulnerable children and their families. “To overcome the immediate and longterm impact of the crisis, the government should ensure, on a priority basis, access to critical services such as health care, nutrition, food security, mental health and psychosoci­al support, protection against violence and ensure social protection and child-sensitive cash transfer initiative­s to the most vulnerable children and poorest families,” they said.

Figures released by Childline 1098, the national helpline for children in India, gave an idea of the scale of the problem. Within the first week of the lockdown, it received 92,000 SOS calls concerning children in distress. Eleven per cent of the calls related to physical health, 8 per cent to child labour, 8 per cent to missing and runaway children and 5 per cent to homelessne­ss. It was also called upon to intervene to prevent abuse, assist children in distress and provide emotional support. In two months, it answered over 10 lakh calls and carried out over 50,000 interventi­ons. From March to April, it prevented 898 child marriages from the 6,04,274 calls it received concerning the problem.

Nobel Laureate Kailash Satyarthi, founder of BBA, made a statement requesting two months’ amnesty from prosecutio­n for trafficker­s and employers of child labour so that they could come forward and release children to the care of the State. Activists felt that such a move would potentiall­y let human rights abusers off the hook and lead to a further increase in cases of traffickin­g which the State would not be able to control.

According to Census 2011, the total number of child labourers in India in the 5-14 age group was 10.11 million. Of these, 4.35 million were categorise­d as main workers and 5.76 million as marginal workers. Sixty-two per cent of child labourers were concentrat­ed in agricultur­e, forestry and fishing, followed by industries and services.

Children were also involved in “worst forms of child labour” including forced labour, bonded labour, prostituti­on, pornograph­y and traffickin­g of drugs. The total number of adolescent labourers (15-18 years) was 22.87 million.

DILUTION OF LABOUR LAWS

Child Rights and You (CRY) cautioned that the demand for children in the agricultur­al sector, home-based enterprise­s and small-scale businesses might increase in the following days. Instead of providing protection from exploitati­on to adult and child workers, 11 States made relaxation­s to the Factories Act, 1948, during the lockdown—rajasthan, Gujarat, Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtr­a, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha and Assam. Many of these States have a high burden of child and adolescent labour, according to CRY.

The relaxation­s include extension of a factory worker’s daily shift from eight to 12 hours a day, six-day week, limited time for rest, reduction in inspection­s and monitoring by authoritie­s, restricted grievance redress mechanisms and limited collective bargaining through labour unions. The Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on (ILO) expressed concern as these relaxation­s violate ILO Convention 144, which calls for tripartite consultati­ons among government, employers and workers.

While this was bad news for all labour, it might lead to an increase in hazardous work, forced labour, debt bondage and human traffickin­g for children and adolescent­s working in factories and industrial setups, said Rahul Sapkal, Assistant Professor, Centre for Labour Studies, Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS). Adolescent workers would be especially vulnerable in the absence of adult labourers who had left for their home towns and villages. Many of them might be forced to work for long hours, in hazardous and often abusive environmen­ts, for little or no pay, and often far from home.

Rahul Sapkal said: “The changes in labour laws will weaken enforcemen­t mechanism, which may further increase child labour amid this crisis. The child labour legislatio­n needs to be revised as many aspects of climate change and hazardous industries are not yet incorporat­ed into it. This revision must include revisiting the definition of what constitute­s hazardous industries, keeping the developing capacities of children in mind.”

Speaking on a webinar organised by CRY, Priyank Kanoongo, chairperso­n of NCPCR (National Commission for Protection of Child Rights), said that any organised sector industry that depended on the unorganise­d sector, such as the automobile manufactur­ing industry, undoubtedl­y employed child labour, if not directly then indirectly. He said unless and until the principal manufactur­er was held accountabl­e for the child labour employed in the unorganise­d sector linked to their industry, the chain of child labour “from Seelampur to Bawana to Moradabad” could not be abolished.

He stressed the need for civil society organisati­ons to press for the registrati­on of first informatio­n reports

(FIRS) against employers. According to him, a familycent­ric approach would have to be adopted to deal with the problem of child labour as “a child-centric approach could only work in countries that had institutio­nal support systems in place”. He suggested that civil society should use existing laws efficientl­y to address the issue of child labour. “We need to ensure that we are using the existing laws, not sitting and feeling helpless. The number of FIRS filed so far is extremely poor compared with the large number of child labourers in the country. Therefore, it is everyone’s responsibi­lity to report and file FIRS on child labour,” he said.

CLOSURE OF SCHOOLS

Sending children to school is considered an important preventive measure against child labour. But as schools remain closed for the foreseeabl­e future, children are forced to stay at home, which increases their risk of getting pushed into the labour market. Given the loss of income for families, it is likely that they will be engaged in home-based or agricultur­al work. Moreover, out-ofschool children are at greater risk of getting caught up in traffickin­g, begging, debt bondage and other indecent and exploitati­ve work conditions.

While efforts were made to continue education for children through remote teaching options such as online classes, radio, television and so on, most children from poor families do not have access to these media. “Only 8 per cent children have access to computer and internet. 24 per cent have smartphone­s,” said Protiva Kundu, Additional Coordinato­r- Research, Centre for Budget and Governance Accountabi­lity (CBGA). It is critical to ensure a continuati­on of education for all children, especially the ones from marginalis­ed households at this juncture. Protiva Kundu that the situation would have a greater effect on girls and disabled children. Even if schools reopen, parents would not have the money to pay fees and would instead require the child to support the family.

She said that there was an urgent need to track the children who had gone back to their villages and connect them to community-level child protection mechanisms, including village child protection committees. Panchayati Raj institutio­ns and school management committees must track every child in their village and ensure their safety, especially from traffickin­g, underage marriage and forced labour. “The government should expand the coverage of the National Child Labour Project in all districts which is currently operating in 323 districts and spend on survey of identifyin­g child labour. Also, it is high time to address dropouts in schools, and the government should expand RTE [Right to Education] Act up to class 12,” Protiva Kundu said.

Puja Marwaha, Chief Executive Officer, CRY, said that sometimes educated people also justified employing child labour on the grounds that the child got some food, shelter or hourly education on the side. But the space of child labour itself was damaging and harmful for all of our future generation­s, she said. “I truly believe that only when all Indians start believing that children below 18 years should not have to work because they are poor or for any other reason will we actually start changing the situation. The advent of COVID-19 seems to be one major contributi­ng factor in the undoing of all efforts made so far in reducing and ending child labour,” she said. m

 ??  ?? A CHILD WORKER at a motorbike-cleaning shop in New Delhi, on June 12.
A CHILD WORKER at a motorbike-cleaning shop in New Delhi, on June 12.
 ??  ?? A BOY
in the western suburbs of Mumbai selling plastic bags to make ends meet, on June 12.
A BOY in the western suburbs of Mumbai selling plastic bags to make ends meet, on June 12.

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