By Tejang Chakma
INDIA’S EFFORTS to fight the menace of child labour is yielding little results. The rhetoric to eliminate child labour of the successive governments at the Centre remained largely on paper.
INDIA’S EFFORTS to fight the menace of child labour is yielding little results. The rhetoric to eliminate child labour of the successive governments at the Centre remained largely on paper.
India is home
to highest number of child labourers under the age of 14 in the world. As per
the 2001 census, an estimated 12.6 million children below the age of 14 years
are engaged as child labourers. Unofficially, the figure is much higher.
Majority of these children are exposed to the worst form of child labour.
It has been
more than five years since the government banned employment of children through
an amendment in the Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act 1986. But the
situation today is far from inspiring.
Why this evil
is not declining? The answer is not difficult to comprehend. The conviction
rate under the Child Labour (Prohibition & Regulation) Act, 1986 is
abysmally low. This fails to act as a deterrent for employers. Enforcement
figures of the Ministry of Labour and Employment states that 23,53,098
inspections were conducted between 1997-98 and 2004-2005. Of these, 1,43,804
violations were detected and 59,026 prosecutions launched. The prosecutions
resulted in 21,481 convictions and 5,505 acquittals.
One of the
reasons for poor conviction in the country is due to lack of action against
violators by the government officials. Instead of taking criminal actions, the
officials make all efforts to save the violators from all types of criminal
actions. This only encourages the violators. Even when the officials are
identified they are given state protection.
A case of
child labour, registered by the National Human Rights Commission in August 2000
in Bihar is a testimony. Two officials mandated to stop child labour were found
responsible for inaction in saving children employed with dye and colour
manufacturing factories in Lakhisarai district. The NHRC asked the state
government to provide detailed information such as whether any fine was
recovered from the employers or the action taken against the erring officers
and the hazardous substance manufacturing companies which employed those
children.
However, the
state government failed to provide any information despite repeated reminders
from the NHRC. Recently, the state government finally agreed to start
departmental proceedings against the two guilty officers. In one of its
proceedings in the case, the NHRC observed “it is a glaring case where the
government officers/officials in connivance with the factory owner made all
efforts to save the factory owners from all types of criminal actions.”
Child labour
is thriving only due to lack of seriousness of the state governments to take
action against the violators including its officials who connive with them.
Unless
enforcement mechanism is strengthened little could be done to arrest child
labour. There is also the need to buttress the provisions for rehabilitation
apart from the need to add more in the list of prohibited employments for
children.
Published on Merinews.com, 4 July 2012
Published on Merinews.com, 4 July 2012
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