The term
“child labour” is often defined as work that
deprives children of their childhood, their potential and their dignity,
and that is harmful to physical and mental development. It refers to
work that:
- is mentally, physically, socially or morally dangerous and harmful to children; and/or
- interferes with their schooling
by: depriving them of the opportunity to attend school; obliging them
to leave school prematurely; or requiring them to attempt to combine
school attendance with excessively long and heavy work.
As per the National Census 2011, there are close to 10.1
million child labourers in India, in the age group of 5 to 14 years.
- 10.13 million child labourers between 5-14 years in India (2011 Census data)
- Child labour in 2011 has decreased by around 20% from 2001 Census Figures
- There are 22.87 million working children in India between 15-18 years.
- As per 2011 Census, 1 in 11 children are working in India (5-18 years)
- 80% of the child labour in India is concentrated in rural areas
- International Labour Organisation 2016 data indicates that there are 152 million working children
in the world between 5-17 years, of which 23.8 million children are in
India. So 16% of the working children (or every 6th working child) in
this age group is in India.
- It reveals that a
large number of children engaged in these occupations are working with
their families, thus exempting them from the proposed ban. Allowing
children to work in family enterprises is likely to have far reaching
implications affecting not only their education and learning outcomes
but also their health and overall development.
- Child labour in India, somehow, has become a social norm that we
accept and tolerate in our society. This exploitative and abusive
practice will continue unless society adopts a zero tolerance attitude
towards it. Children continue to be exploited and abused because the
State and people do not address children’s issues comprehensively and
effectively.
- However, only ‘rescuing’ children, often will not help. What is
required is addressing the reasons that force children to work. Children
work mainly to help their families because the adults do not have
appropriate employment and adequate income. Children also work because
there is a demand for cheap labour in the market. When children are
forced to work long hours their ability to get adequate nourishment and
to attend school is limited, preventing them from gaining education.
- There is today global attention on India’s child labour problem - A
recent U.S. Department of Labor featured India among 74 countries with
“significant incidence of critical working conditions” in the List of
Goods Produced by Child Labor or Forced Labor. Children are forced into
child labour as they are 'caught in the crossfire' of poverty, and
become a source of money for their family.
This section provides in-depth information on several
sectors of child labour :-
1. Garment industry
Child labour runs rampant in India’s garment industry, hidden away in
small, owner-operated enterprises or home setups. A Save the Children’s
report on the garment industry in Delhi (2015) found that the Capital’s
8000 plus garment labourers experience loud noise, poor lighting, poor
ventilation and sharp tools. 36% of home workers are never paid. The
report opened Delhi’s eyes to the practice and made the city realise
that the city needed government, civil society, communities and
industries to come together and end the practice.
2. Brick kilns
India’s brick kilns traditionally have used child labourers, with
children assisting their parents, working long hours and neglecting
their education. Save the Children’s Brick Kiln Project sees volunteers
provide children immediate access to education, facilitating their
mainstreaming into formal education via their Bridge Course Centre
(BCC). Additionally, the NGO has partnered with NMCS for a hand washing
campaign in brick kilns. 70 schooling centres across factories have
given children a ray of hope, and the those who
support an NGO like
Save the Children have engaged factories to operate with a zero child
labour policy. This has helped 16,000 children escape a future of
building bricks
3. Unorganised sectors
Child labour can be easily spotted in India's unorganised sector
children are hired as cheap and fast workers in tea shops, dhabas, small
shops, and as personal servants and errand boys. After the unorganised
agriculture sector, it is the unorganised, informal sector which is the
biggest child labour employer. The largely family owned informal sector
prefers child labour for low costs and 'easy to hire, easy to fire'
outlook towards children. Even school going children work in
after-school home-based labour.
4. Agriculture
2011 Census data shows that the agriculture sector might be India's
biggest buyer of child labour. Children are hired for everything from
cotton and cottonseed production to sugarcane, soybean and paddy
transplantation, and work long hours for low pay and poor living
conditions. Save the Children has protected 8 lakh children living in
cotton communities in the states of Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan, after
freeing 65,000 children from child labour in a pilot project across
1,866 villages of Gujarat and Maharashtra. Thousands of farmers pledged
for child-labour free processes.
5. Fireworks
India's fireworks sector is one of the biggest, yet most well-hidden
employers of child labour. It has been repeatedly noted in Sivakasi, the
South Indian town that is famed across India for matches and fireworks.
These children work long hours, especially during India's festive
season, in cramped conditions. Direct exposure to chemicals used in
fireworks harms their lungs, skin and triggers ailments in the future.
With hidden child labour, small manufacturers of both licensed and
unlicensed fireworks are able to keep costs low and make large profits.
Conclusion
India's 2006 amendment to the Child Labour Prohibition and Regulation
Act needs support to be implemented from non-governmental organisations
like Save the Children. If you desire to help a poor child in any way,
give donation to Save the Children is the fastest way to realise this noble goal.