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India rights panel to probe failure to support rescued slave workers

by Roli Srivastava | @Rolionaroll | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Friday, 5 January 2018 08:05 GMT

ARCHIVE PHOTO: A girl works with her father in a kiln at a brickyard in India's desert state of Rajasthan, January 22, 2013. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui

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Under Indian law, survivors should be provided with release certificates that entitle them to cash compensation, jobs, land and education for their children

By Roli Srivastava

MUMBAI, Jan 5 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - India's National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) will investigate the failure of authorities to provide a group of enslaved workers with legal and financial support after being rescued, an official said Friday.

Local government officials and rights activists with the National Campaign Committee for Eradication of Bonded Labour (NCCEBD) freed about 100 people last weekend from brick-making factories in the northern state of Jammu and Kashmir.

The workers and their families had been trafficked from the state of Chhattisgarh, in central India, and some had been working for as long as 30 years, according to Nirmal Gorana of the NCCEBD.

"They had not once stepped out of the brick kilns," he said. "This was a clear case of trafficking for bonded labour."

Under Indian law, survivors should be provided with release certificates, which are legal documents that entitle them to cash compensation, jobs, land and education for their children.

The NHRC has decided to investigate why officials in the districts of Reasi and Samba - where the workers were - did not issue the papers, said the commission's registrar, Surajit Dey.

"They were trafficked workers," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. "We have asked the district magistrates of Reasi and Samba to issue them release certificates."

Sheetal Nanda, the Samba district magistrate, said there was no evidence that the workers and their families were held against their will.

"There is no question of a release certificate until the time we can establish it was bonded labour, which would mean they were made to stay by force and their payments were withheld," she said by telephone.

India banned bonded labour in 1976, but millions of people remain enslaved in fields, brick kilns, rice mills, brothels and private homes. Most are from marginalised Dalit and tribal communities.

In 2016, the government announced plans to rescue more than 18 million bonded labourers by 2030, and to increase compensation for rescued workers by fivefold.

"But in many cases, officials fail to recognise them as bonded workers and simply send them back to their home state," said Umi Daniel, a migrant rights activist with Aide et Action in the eastern state of Odisha.

He estimated that only about 10 to 15 percent of those rescued in the last five years were given release certificates.

The workers and their families who were rescued last weekend were taken to Delhi, India's capital, where they staged protests demanding certificates.

(Reporting by Roli Srivastava @Rolionaroll; Editing by Jared Ferrie. Please credit Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience. Visit news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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