Problem of Child Labour in India and Its Causes:: With Special Reference To The State of Assam
Child labor is a significant problem in India, with over 12 million children engaged in work. Poverty is the main driver, as families cannot afford to care for children without their labor and income. In Assam, child labor is particularly prevalent, with over 347,000 child laborers recorded - higher than the national average. Most child laborers in Assam work in agriculture, especially tea plantations. While laws prohibit child labor, enforcement remains a challenge. Non-profits and activists are working to address the issue.
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Problem of Child Labour in India and Its Causes:: With Special Reference To The State of Assam
Child labor is a significant problem in India, with over 12 million children engaged in work. Poverty is the main driver, as families cannot afford to care for children without their labor and income. In Assam, child labor is particularly prevalent, with over 347,000 child laborers recorded - higher than the national average. Most child laborers in Assam work in agriculture, especially tea plantations. While laws prohibit child labor, enforcement remains a challenge. Non-profits and activists are working to address the issue.
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PROBLEM OF CHILD
LABOUR IN INDIA AND
ITS CAUSES: With special reference to the state of Assam
Presented by: Raajdwip Vardhan
INTRODUCTION Child labour is defined by ILO as “work that deprives children of their childhood their potential and their dignity and that is harmful to physical and mental development.” Worldwide, there are 168 million children engaged in child labour, in India the number is 12.6 million. The main causes behind child labour is acute poverty, coupled with the high birth rates among the population, which greatly increases the amount of mouths to feed in the family. Illiteracy is also another major factor. Multiple laws have been passed in India against Child labour., the Constitution also contains provisions that safeguard children against child labour. In northeast India, Child labour is compartively lesser than the other parts of India, but it still engulfs a large number of children. It is highest in Assam. RESEARCH QUESTIONS What is the condition of child labour in the Indian society?
What are the legal provisions related to child labour in
the Indian legal scenario?
What is the condition of child labour in the state of
Assam, and what are the steps taken by the government to tackle this problem? CHILD LABOUR IN INDIA India has one of the largest populations of child labourers in the world at 12 million, majority of which is employed in the rural areas about 60% of them being below the age of 10 years. Children are mostly employed in the unorganized sector in India. The reason for this is the lack of rules and regulations. Child labour not only affects the physical and mental well-being of children but also affects their cognitive growth due to the lack of education. Among the Indian states, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra. UP alone has 19,27,997 child labourers of the total number of 12million Regarding the causes of child labour, poverty is the greatest socio- economic factor that is related to child labour. Parents are unable to invest in their children’s welfare and thus get their children to supplement in the meager family income. Poverty also leads to bonded child labour labour is a system of forced, or partly forced, labour under which the child, or usually child's parent enter into an agreement, oral or written, with a creditor. The child performs work as in-kind repayment of credit. The parents begin considering children as an asset which can be used to supplement the family income and thus they concieve multiple children, large families mean more mouths to feed and thus leads to more poverty. This becomes a chain-like situation. Thus, large family sizes also contribute to child labour. Illiteracy is another reason. Due o illiteracy among parents, they do not realise the ill effects of sending their children to work. Child labour is preferred due to its cheap nature and the fact that children are easier to discipline than adults. Human trafficking for child labour is another related social evil. NHRC reports 40,000 missing children, 11,000 of which go untraced, the main output for such children being the labour industry. Children are employed in very dismal conditions, often in hazardous labour, such as the glass bangle industry of Faridabad or the fireworks industry of Sivasaki. In 12 years, fom 2002-2014, 230 children had died in the bangle factories of Sivasaki. The glass bangle industry robs the children of their eeyesight since they have to work in dark furnaces. Victims of child labour often have to undergo abuse form their employers, this may amount to physical, mental, psychological or even sexual abuse. In 2006, a 10 year old girl was killed by her employers, in 2011 a 11 year old boy was beaten to death. Stories of sexual abuse among young girls who work as domestic workers are many in number. Government has taken multiple steps to curb child labour, ranging from national child labour rpojects to Sarva Shiksha Abhiyaan. NGOs also fight against child labour, along with social activists. LAWS AGAINST CHILD LABOUR Multiple constitutional provisions and acts talk about child labour. Article 24: No child below the age of fourteen years shall be employed to work in any factory or mine or engaged in any other hazardous employment. Article 39(f): that children are given opportunities and facilities to develop in a healthy manner and in conditions of freedom and dignity and that childhood and youth are protected against exploitation and against moral and material abandonment. Article 21(A): Right to Education: The State shall provide free and compulsory education to all children of the age of 6 to 14 years in such manner as the State, by law, may determine. Acts against Child Labour: The Mines Act of 1952 : The Act prohibits the employment of children below 18 years of age in excavations where work for the purposes of searching and obtaining minerals is carried out. Section 40 prohibits employment of children in underground or open cast mine.
The Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection) of Children Act
of 2000 : This law made it a crime, punishable with a prison term, for anyone to procure or employ a child in any hazardous employment or in bondage The Child and Adolescent Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act of 1986 : The Act prohibits the employment of children below the age of 14 years in hazardous occupations identified in a list by the law. This list contained 16 occupations and 65 processes that are hazardous to the children’s lives and health The list was expanded in 2006, and again in 2008. In 2016, the Act was amended (not in force as of 30 July 2016) to prohibit employment of child below 14 years in all occupation (except for helping in non- hazardous family business and of child artists in the entertainment industry and sports). Further, adolecent between 14-18 years will not be allowed to work in hazardous industries and processes. CHILD LABOUR IN ASSAM Among the north-eastern states child labour is highest in Assam. Assam employs 3,47,353 child labourers. This number constitutes 4.9& of the total population of Assam in this particular age group, which is higher than the national average of 4.5%. 13 districts of Assam are above the state average, with Dhemaji topping the list with 7.9%. According to the sectorial distribution of child labour in Assam, agriculture is the highest, accounting for 69.26% of the total population, according to the 2004-05 NSSO figures on Child labour in the state. According to for Development Initiatives Assam’s Bodoland is a hub of child traffickers. Children from North Eastern states especially girls are trafficked A large number of adolescent girls are duped in the garb of decent employment, only to land into prostitution or sold as brides in states like Haryana, Punjab and Himachal Pradesh. The largest individual sector in Assam which employs children are the tea gardens. The Assam State Commission for Protection of Child Rights The Assam State Commission for Protection of Child Rights had said that of the 3.4% of child labourers in Assam, 1.58% work in tea gardens. Tea gardens of Udalguri, Sonitpur, Bongaigaon are infamous for child trafficking. Among the cities of Assam, the city with the largest population of child labour is Guwahati. According to CHILDLINE Guwahati, out of every four families in the city of Guwahati there are at least three domestic helper children and out of every four such children, three of them are girls. Also noteworthy in this connection is that these children belong to the age group of 5-15 years. In Assam, a state action plan against child labour was formed by the state government to fight against child labour, drafted in 2015. Apart from this, multiple social activists and NGOs also work against child labour, Childline and UTSAH(Universal Team for Social being prime examples of this. Action and Help), Parijat Academy and Assam Center for Rural Development being prime examples. CONCLUSION Child labour is a rampant social problem in India just like throughout the countries of the world. Poverty and illiteracy coupled wiith large families form the major causes of child labour in India. In the Constitution, multiple provisions against child labour have been provided but they have not been implemented properly and thus their impact has been greatly reduced. Assam contains the highest number of child laborers in north-east India, more than half of them employed in the tea gardens of Assam. Another major chunk have been employed as domestic workers in the major cities. Steps have been taken today by the government against child labour, NGOs and activists have also joined in the fight. Perhaps the day is not far when child labour will be finally eradicated from society and thus children will be relaxed from the burden of labour.