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SHOCKING
LEVELS OF ABUSE OF CHILD WORKERS IN INDIA
(25 August 2006)
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A
young dalit girl working as a sweeper in Chitrakoot (India).
Image by Nishant Lalwani from 'A Portrait of A Broken People'
exhibition.
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The
Indian Child Labour Act must do more to protect children as
new research reveals shocking levels of abuse of child domestic
workers. Save the Children has welcomed the Indian government's
recent amendment to the Child Labour Act but says it does not
go far enough to protect children working as domestic helpers.
The charity is calling for the age limit of the act to be raised
from 14 to 18 years, as the majority of domestic workers fall
into this age range. |
The
call comes after a recent study by the charity reveals shockingly
high levels of emotional, physical and sexual abuse among children
working as domestic helpers in other people's homes in Calcutta.
In India conservative estimates put the number of children in domestic
work at 11.5 million. Save the Children knows that in Calcutta alone
there are 50,000 Child Domestic Workers. Therefore, carefully planned
steps need to be put in place, to set in motion the relevant executive
and judiciary bodies for the release of children from work.
The
study, carried out by Save the Children over a four-year period
in six districts of West Bengal, found that these children were
routinely subjected to many different forms of abuse from unsafe
working conditions and lack of food to being beaten, deliberately
burnt or sexually abused.
Key
findings of the research:
*
Most child domestic workers are young girls who come from poor
families and are forced to work for up to 15 hours a day with
no breaks and little or no pay.
* 68% of the children surveyed had faced physical abuse and 46.6%
of the children had faced severe abuse that had led to injuries
* 32.2% had their private parts touched by the abuser, 20% had
been forced to have sexual intercourse
* 50% of children do not get any leave in a year, 37% never see
their families
* 32% of families had no idea where their daughters were working,
27% admitted they knew they were getting beaten and harassed.
* 78% of workers receive less than Rs 500 per month.
"Child
domestic workers are unlikely to ever go to school, they have no
control over their income, are subject to irregular working hours
and face repeated insults, threats and violence. They do not get
to mingle with other children and often suffer from malnourishment.
Even more worryingly, a significant number of child domestic workers
face sexual abuse. We welcome the move to outlaw this form of hazardous
labour but it does not go far enough to protect children,"
said Manab Ray, Manager of Save the Children's Child Domestic Worker
project.
The
Child Labour Act now states that action can be taken against anyone
who employs children under 14 in domestic work in homes or hotels
but Save the Children's research shows that 74% of child domestic
workers are between the ages of 12 to 16. The amendment leaves a
large chunk of child domestic workers out in the cold.
Save
the Children is calling for clear procedures to implement the law,
stringent penalties for employers and for agencies that handle the
placement of child domestic workers to be brought under close scrutiny.
The charity is also asking for effective plans to rehabilitate former
child workers and help them re-enter the education system and benefit
from India's Poverty Allieviation programmes.
Visit
www.savethechildren.org.uk
for further information.
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