Chennai:
India celebrated 65 years of Independence on Wednesday
but freedom still eludes a section of workers who are neither documented nor
registered and spend their lives behind the closed doors of rice mills, stone
quarries or brick kilns, according to a panel of experts.
Thirty-six years after the Union government abolished
bonded labour system in 1976, it is still prevalent in Tamil Nadu and many
other states with migration and contract system giving a new shape to the age
old system of forced labour, experts said at a panel discussion organized by
International Justice Mission, which included rights activists, academicians
and policy makers.
Tamil Nadu chairman and managing director of civil
supplies corporation P W C Davidar while sharing his experiences on various
measures by the state to eradicate bonded labour said that the act is not
helpful in eradicating bonded labour and there are lot of interpretations.
He also said bonded labour is not occupation or caste
specific, it is culture specific and there is a need to sensitise authorities
about the elements of bonded labour. But a study done earlier by Supreme Court
states that 87 per cent of bonded labourers are from the scheduled castes,
scheduled tribes and most backward classes.
Prof Ravi Srivastava of school of social sciences,
Jawahar Lal Nehru University, said that migration and the contract system has
resulted in evolution of neo-bondage. “The fulcrum of bondage and neo-bondage
has shifted to organized sector. Due to contract system and migration, the
condition of people working in neo-bondage will rise,” he said.
Citing example of Kerala, where bonded labour was
extinct after the abolition of it by an act, he said it has been revived with
the large-scale migration of workers from Bihar and Jharkhand. He said the
government failed to set realistic goals to abolish bonded labour.
Interestingly, Ramesh, a bonded labourer who was
released recently, highlighted the hollowness of rehabilitation measures. “Once
we are freed by authorities, the biggest challenge is to rebuild our lives. But
officials fail to provide us patta or ration card forcing us to return and work
as bonded labour,” he says.
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