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Aditya Dantuluri's List: Justic Project-Child Labor

    • Hundreds and thousands of children are toiling as bonded labor in India’s silk industry and the government is not able to do anything to protect their rights. Those children who are working in India’s silk industry are virtually slaves.
    • he children are bound to work for their employers in exchange of the loan taken by their parents or families,

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    • In Northern India the exploitation of little children for labor is an accepted practice and perceived by the local population as a necessity to alleviate poverty.
    • In Northern India the exploitation of little children for labor is an accepted practice and perceived by the local population as a necessity to alleviate poverty. Carpet weaving industries pay very low wages to child laborers and make them work for long hours in unhygienic conditions. Children working in such units are mainly migrant workers from Northern India, who are shunted here by their families to earn some money and send it to them

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    • In some industries children are forced to do repetitive and tedious work like weaving carpets, assembling boxes, polishing shoes, cleaning and arranging a shops goods. It is seen that children are found working more in the informal sectors compared to factories and commercial registered organizations. Little children are often seen selling in the streets or working quietly on domestic chores within the high walls of homes – hidden away from the eyes of the media and labor inspectors
    • 218 million children between the age of 5 and 17 working all over the world.

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    • The children who are sold as bonded labor only get a handful of coarse grain to keep them alive in return for their labor
    • Indian sweet shops are notorious for profiting from child labor which is tantamount to slavery.
    • Children as young as eleven and thirteen toil in these shops for hours on end and suffer from exertion and fatigue.

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    • Statistics reveal that India has 17 million child labourers -- the highest in  the world
    • Lack of awareness about the basic rights of a child has lead to easy violation  of laws meant to protect and empower children. In homes, on the streets and in  sweatshops

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    • India has the largest number of children employed than any other country in the  world.
    • 90 million out of 179 million children in the six to 14 age group do not go to  school and are engaged in some occupation or other.

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    • Maharashtra is officially child labour-free but the exploitation of children  continues in the zari units in its capital.
    • lanes of Govandi,

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    • The fireworks industry, which is concerned at the implications of the World  Trade Organisation regime and a dwindling domestic and international market, has  been claiming for the last four years that child labour ``has been eradicated''  from registered units.
    • NGOs, who are fighting against employment of children, do not see any tangible  change in the predicament of children who are involved in manufacture of matches  and fireworks. The gullible children, they point out, are being exploited by  manufacturers, who take cover under legal provisions that allow children to work  in households.

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    • three years ago, when his mother died following a prolonged illness
    • his father could regain his position, he died in an accident a year ago.

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    • My sister is ten years old. Every morning at  seven she goes to the bonded labor man, and every night at nine she comes home.  He treats her badly; he hits her if he thinks she is working slowly or if she  talks to the other children, he yells at her, he comes looking for her if she is  sick and cannot go to work. I feel this is very difficult for her.
    • don't care about school or playing. I don't  care about any of that. All I want is to bring my sister home from the bonded  labor man. For 600 rupees I can bring her home-that is our only chance to get  her back.  

      We don't have 600 rupees . . . we will never  have 600 rupees.  

      -Lakshmi,1 nine  year-old beedi (cigarette) roller, Tamil Nadu. Six hundred rupees is the  equivalent of approximately $17

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    • Poor children in India begin working at a very young and  tender age
    • children have to work to help their  families and some families expect their children to continue the family business  at a young age.

       

      India has all along followed a proactive

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