Business Standard

UK firms withdraw granite over slavery concerns

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Leading UK retail chains like John Lewis and Habitat have withdrawn granite products from their range over fears of child labour and slavery within its Indian supply chains.

Businesses selling granite products such as kitchen worktops and tiles are scrutinisi­ng the source of their products, after global investigat­ors discovered that debt bondage, underage workers and unsafe, unhealthy working conditions are part and parcel of daily working life in Indian quarries, according to a report in the Observer.

India is the largest global producer of granite, accounting for 49 per cent of the world's raw stone export in 2015. Three-quarters of the country’s granite is mined in just three states — Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Karnataka.

An investigat­ion of 22 quarries and six waste stone processing sites in these states was recently published by the India Committee of the Netherland­s (ICN) and Stop Child Labour and revealed human rights and labour rights violations.

"There are a few quarries where conditions are better than others, but by and large the poor conditions we described in the report are representa­tive of the sector as a whole," Diewertje Heyl, ICN's corporate social responsibi­lity officer said.

The violations alleged in the report include children under 14 working in waste stone processing, wages tied to extortiona­te loans, and safety equipment offered only when mining inspection­s were taking place. The quarries' performanc­e was graded on six criteria: child labour, bonded labour, wages and social benefits, health, safety, and freedom of associatio­n.

More than 30 natural stone companies from the UK, EU, US, Australia and Canada are named in the report as sourcing products from the 22 quarries.

India is the largest global producer of granite, accounting for 49% of the world's rawstone export in 2015

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