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Writer's pictureRitik Agrawal

UNFOLDING UNSEEN VOICES OF CHILD LABOUR

Nisha Chakraborty,

Shyambazar Law College

1. Introduction

The exploitation of children is another social evil that India has always had to face even as several laws have been implemented to abolish the practice of child labour. The Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act 1986 was enacted to prohibit children under fourteen years of age from dangerous occupations and to regulate the employment of children in other employment. These provisions were further tightened in 2016 rendering prohibited all work for children under 14 and restricted employment in dangerous occupations for children aged between 14 and 18 years. However, implementing these laws still poses a serious problem.

A young boy carries a large sack in a sepia-toned field. A wooden hut on stilts is behind him, with people working in the distance. Rustic mood.

Childhood can best be described as a period of growth, education, and happiness. However, for millions of children, it remains a time of difficulties and failed dreams. Today, child labour still takes the childhood of children while people criticize it. What should have been in school or having a happy childhood, such children work under very poor conditions, which shows a major social failure.

2. Child labour - The silent tears of the nation

The reasons for child labour involvement include poverty, lack of concern for the young from society, and system failure. The prevalence of child labour in India is also due to the inability of a huge population to fund standard needs, implying that child labour is a way of survival. The above-mentioned census means that about 10.1 million children were involved in labour across the country, which defines the seriousness of this problem.

The first progressive law governing the evil of child labour was the Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act 1986. It banned the employment of children below 14 years in certain types of work and restricted their participation in allowed activities. Yet it did not sufficiently cover the youth in the age between fourteen and eighteen years or hazardous work more elaborately. The year 2016 tried to reduce these gaps by extending protection to children below 14 years as well as placing restraints on risky employment for children above this age. However, enforcement is generally a weak link owing to corruption, lack of funding and financial pressures relating to the enforcement action, especially in rural settings and the informal economy.

3. The Lost Childhood

For each number you consider the dreams and hopeful voices of children are silenced and trigger ignored forever. These children are subjected to challenging working conditions, and to worse working conditions they work on construction sites, factories, and farmland. The young workers suffer abuse, neglect and exploitation at workplaces and they do not have anyone to stand for their rights.

Imagine a boy of 10 years sewing footballs barefooted in a poorly lit room with poisonous chemical substances or a girl toting bags of stones or rocks in the sun. Most of these children are paid very little or even not paid at all for the work they are forced to do, either to repay family debts or having been sold into forced labour.

Nonetheless, basic education, a human right, still proves to be an unattainable goal for these young children. Lacking education, they are confined to the stranglehold of poverty and inequitable treatment. The impact is heavy-clocking on them as if they are insignificant, inconsequent, and inhuman; they miss childhood with all its innocence.

4. In this paper, the author seeks to take off the veil on child work.

Child labour is a universal problem that increases the suffering of millions of children around the world. The ILO has stated that about 215 million children between the ages of 5 to 14 years are working around the world. India has the highest percentage representing 10.1 million child workers, many of whom are involved in agriculture. India remains one of the most populous countries with a 69% child employment prevalence rate in agriculture. Irritations, sunburns, and exposure to toxic chemicals are other vices associated with child labour in the agriculture sector.

An estimated 16 million children are engaged in hazardous work worldwide and are at risk of suffering from impaired health, security, and virtue. These jobs are normally in hazardous sectors such as mining, construction, and production, and thus can expose children to hazardous equipment and toxic products. The major concentration of child labour is in the Asia-Pacific region, where all country's types of child labour hazards are focused and represent more than one-half or 47% of the world’s total child labour force.

The globally worst kinds of child labour such as trafficking, forced labour, and sexual exploitation, involve roughly 32 million children. Worryingly, approximately half of these are below the age of 11 years and, as such, are easily exploitable. Such statistics prove that the question of child labour should not be solved only through immediate intervention but through complex approaches.

5. The End of Silent Struggles

To fight against child labour, it is important to focus on causes like illiteracy, poverty, and socio-economic differences. The Right to Education Act 2009 to provide free education for children in the age group of 6-14 years becomes an important tool in this war. Nevertheless, education is by no means enough. Awareness creation must make parents and communities realize the importance of education and the benefits that will accrue in the future.

It is further suggested that a particular approach to support families economically would help to decrease the utilization of child labour. The provision of financial assistance, skill training programs, and employment opportunities to adults enhances the ability of families to choose different priorities relating to education rather than being fixated on finding a means of income. Others are such things as free meals given to school-going children like the Mid-Day Meal Scheme in India, which makes parents take their children to school instead of taking them for labour.

6. Organizing for Twenty-First-Century Child Labour Free

Child labour can only be eliminated through international and national efforts by governments, businesses, and communities. Consumers also come in handy by practising ethics when purchasing by encouraging products that do not use child labour. For instance, 41 children were saved from contracting the filthy environment in Azad Market, New Delhi. These poor children were engaged in hawking, in small shops, sewing clothes, packing something, and carrying heavy loads, which should have been in school.

These children were given immediate protection by rescuers from Bachpan Bachao Andolan while the campaign demonstrated the necessity for reform. Child labour laws must be implemented to the letter and with most compulsive child workers coming from poor backgrounds, social welfare schemes should be put in place to ensure that they do not resort to such practices in the future.

Another area of focus would also be the same where people in the community take active participation in projects that are carried out. Though teachers, activists, and local leaders understand the need to eliminate child labour, they have to devise ways of reporting cases of child labour individually. Offering employment and training to adults is rather an effective way of relieving economic stress, thus avoiding families' use of their children.

Young boy in a dim factory, surrounded by workers at machines. Dusty, grayscale setting with large windows and a somber atmosphere.

Currently, organizations such as Bachpan Bachao Andolan headed by Kailash Satyarthi, the Nobel Laurette, who has achieved a lot through rescue operations, and rehabilitation. These efforts give children something as simple as safety as well as education and hope for a better future.

7. A Shared Responsibility

The eradication of child labour is everyone’s responsibility. Though governments need to enhance the implementation of measures, it’s also important to overcome discrimination factors in society, such as poverty and illiteracy. There is a need for organizations to commit to ethical operations, and erase issues of exploitive labour within a supply chain. Consumers also have a part to play in this by purchasing only from fair trade and asking brands for their accountability.

It will also be effective if corruption-fighting agencies and organizations, civil, and non-profit organizations work hand in hand with communities to spread the word and avail solutions for education and freedom. Schemes such as the Mid-Day Meal Scheme have been applied in eradicating child labour as parents are forced to take their children to school due to the meals they receive in school.

International cooperation is also equally important. The developed countries should provide funds for launching the programs that would focus on eradicating child labour at the source. This encompasses supporting efforts towards education, offering funds for technical support and encouraging efforts that will increase economic development as a way of minimizing poverty levels.

8. Conclusion

Something like child labour is a very serious violation of children’s rights and leaves the child without education, health and future. Currently, despite advancements in legal provisions like the Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act and global efforts like the International Labour Organisation’s International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC) etc, there persists problems.

This therefore means that the cause of defeating child labour needs everybody’s support. Governments must increase the effectiveness of implementing enforcement and eliminating structural factors. Business entities and consumers play a role in practising ethical conduct, and consumers have to embrace education and political power to fight exploitation.

By understanding and accounting for the socio-economic factors that keep children in work and promoting children’s rights to education, care, and protection we will ensure every child a safe chance to learn and develop. Altogether, it is possible to witness the last screams of child labour and provide further generations with the best scenarios possible.

9. References

1.      "The Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Amendment Act, 2016." 05 Aug. 2016, https://labour.gov.in/whatsnew/child-labour-prohibition-and-regulation-amendment-act-2016.

2.      "Lost Childhoods: Current Trends and Challenges in India's Child Labour Laws." https://www.legalserviceindia.com/legal/article-11507-lost-childhoods-current-trends-and-challenges-in-india-s-child-labour-laws.html.

3.      "Child Labour - International Labour Organization." https://www.ilo.org/topics-and-sectors/child-labour.

4.      "Child Labour in India: Causes, Consequences and Solutions - Next IAS." 17 Aug. 2024, https://www.nextias.com/blog/child-labour-in-india/.

5.      "41 child labourers rescued from Delhi's toy factories - India Today." 24 May. 2023, https://www.indiatoday.in/cities/delhi/story/delhi-child-labour-bachpan-bachao-andolan-nobel-laureate-kailash-satyarthi-2383716-2023-05-24.

6.      "National Programme of Mid Day Meal in Schools (MDMS)." https://pmposhan.education.gov.in/Files/PAB/PAB-2018-19/States/WB/1_WB_Write%20up.pdf.

7.      "International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour and Forced ...." https://www.ilo.org/about-ilo/how-ilo-works/flagship-programmes/international-programme-elimination-child-labour-and-forced-labour-ipec.

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