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Bondage labor in India

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BigDaddyWatch

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it seems that India can't compete with China even with the widespread use of slave and child labor.

A $110 loan, then 20 years of debt bondage

A bonded laborer named Haresh in West Bengal, India, once described to me how he took a loan of approximately $110 from the local landowner to get married to his beloved wife, Sarika.

Two decades later, Haresh told me, “My entire family is still in debt to the landowner. Sarika and I work in the fields, my sons and their wives work at the brick kilns. One day my grandchildren will work for the landowner. There is no way to repay these debts. We will only be free when we die.”


Haresh had no real sense of what his outstanding debts were. Since his initial loan, he had taken numerous loans from the same landowner for basic subsistence, medicines, repairs to his hut and other reasons. He was also charged interest that often exceeded 100% per year. Destitute and isolated, Haresh could not access any other source of credit. He and his family were forced to work 14 or more hours a day by the landowner, almost every day of the year, with barely enough food and water to survive.

Haresh’s story is an example of the millions of bonded laborers across South Asia. Like Haresh, many bonded laborers have been in bondage for much of their lives. Others enter in and out of bondage several times; and still others enter in and out of bondage every year for seasonal industries, such as agriculture and brick-making. These individuals take loans and try to work them off, but due to deeply exploitive manipulations by their exploiters, they end up toiling against these small debts for years.

It is important to understand: bonded labor is a form of slavery prohibited by international and South Asian law. However, bonded labor remains an ever-evolving, highly complicated mode of labor exploitation that persists in broad daylight.

At its essence, bonded labor involves the exploitive interlinking of credit and labor agreements that devolve into slave-like exploitation due to severe power imbalances between the lender and the borrower. The system persists due to poverty, absence of alternative credit sources, a lack of justice and rule of law, and social acceptance of the exploitation of minority castes and ethnicities that has been prevalent in South Asia since Vedic times.

Debt bondage is not historically unique to South Asia. It was a common mode of feudal labor exploitation across much of the world centuries ago. However, a mix of social revolution and transition to industrialized market economies largely extinguished bonded labor throughout Europe, North America and East Asia. No such revolution ever took place in South Asia.

As a result, I estimate there are approximately 18.5 to 22.5 million debt bondage slaves in the world today, almost 90% of whom are in South Asia. This makes bonded labor the most expansive form of slavery in the world, with approximately six out of 10 slaves being bonded laborers. (Related: The challenges of counting a ‘hidden’ population)

Bonded labor is also an active contributor to the global economy. I have documented hundreds of bonded laborers in more than 20 industries, such as rice, tea, frozen fish and shrimp, carpets, cigarettes, fireworks, minerals and stones, gems and apparel. I have also traced the supply chains of these products from the point of exploitation in South Asia to retailers in the European Union and the United States.

Beyond the global economy, bonded labor may also present risks to global security. My most current research indicates there are increasing security risks associated with the suffering, poverty, and exploitation that feeds into debt bondage. Extremists in Pakistan and India have begun to recruit amongst current, former, and potential bonded laborers with promises of income, stability, and a way of fighting back against the governments that have consigned them to abuse and exploitation.

Bonded labor is a relic of history that should have long ago been eliminated from South Asia, but greed, corruption, and government ineffectiveness allow this caustic mode of exploitation to persist well into modern tines. In order to ensure basic human rights, guarantee untainted global supply chains, and protect international security, the forces that promote bonded labor must be tackled immediately.

http://thecnnfreedomproject.blogs.cnn.com/2011/06/02/a-110-loan-then-20-years-of-debt-bondage/
 
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Are you plain crazy or CPC brand? Such insecurity? Damn wait 5 yrs then when you see thorium plants on large scale and Chennai becoming Detroit of Asia. Let's roll......


Let they earn their daily bread mate...:omghaha:

look at the opening of this thread:'' it seems that India can't compete with China even with the widespread use of slave and child labor.''

And the rest of article speaks about ''Bonded labour in South Asia'' but he changed title to ''Bondage labour in India''
 
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The source is a blog and it talks about entire south Asia.

Though its very unfortunate.
 
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it seems that India can't compete with China even with the widespread use of slave and child labor.

Ok

1.) Wrong section... or is this in anyway related to defence?

2.) Why did you have to bring in China???? Your intention to troll is obvious.
 
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The urge to find fault takes people to strange depths.

The article is of June 2011 vintage, and is hopelessly out of time.

From the one & a quarter line written by the poster it is hard to discern if the intention was to troll China, India or both.
 
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Lol cinnese talking about bonded labor in another country. While India abolished bonded labor after independence and it is a crime to practice it, Chinese government maintains massive labor camps where political prisoners are worked to death.
 
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Are Indian members here saying that India is not in South Asia ? Do Indian members wants to claim there is no bondage labor and child labor in India ? Don't Indian members here always say they cannot compete with China's "slave labor" ? Don't Indian members always take the moral high ground on these issue's when it comes to China ? Now it seems that even with slave labor India cannot compete against China. And not to mention the hypocrisy of the Indian members here when talking about the Chinese economy and slave labor. Or is it simple denial ?
 
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Are Indian members here saying that India is not in South Asia ? Do Indian members wants to claim there is no bondage labor and child labor in India ? Don't Indian members here always say they cannot compete with China's "slave labor" ? Don't Indian members always take the moral high ground on these issue's when it comes to China ? Now it seems that even with slave labor India cannot compete against China. And not to mention the hypocrisy of the Indian members here when talking about the Chinese economy and slave labor. Or is it simple denial ?

Bondage Labor is abolished in India along time ago. India is not like china where humans are treated as assets to make cheap products in prison camps.
 
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Bondage Labor is abolished in India along time ago. India is not like china where humans are treated as assets to make cheap products in prison camps.

Didn't you read the article i posted, there are about 18,5 to 22,5 million people living in bondage labor around the world. 90% of those are in South Asia and the majority of those are in India. The fact that it has been abolished doesn't mean that it doesn't happen anymore.
 
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Posting from blog...........


But bonded slave labour is non existent in India,,,,,Labourers are free to move to any city, town or village.

Unlike in CHina, only restricted numbers are allowed in cities....
 
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Posting from blog...........


But bonded slave labour is non existent in India,,,,,Labourers are free to move to any city, town or village.

Unlike in CHina, only restricted numbers are allowed in cities....

basically if you are poor or poor looking, you cannot live in their pretty looking city. Chinese take their fake pride seriously.
 
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appreciate ur source..
 
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Indians have been slaves of Central Asia invaders and British for 1000 years. Today the Brahmin freed themselves but they continue to enslave others.
 
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