Where Knowledge Rules

Politics, News & Issues:

International Politics

Get a Widget for this title

Child trafficking and slave labor in India

Lost and Found - Child Laborers

Child trafficking, indentured servitude, factory labor and the sex trade, comprise an "industry" that huge numbers of children fall victim to each year, disappearing into an underground world. The conditions these children are forced into essentially amount to nothing more than slavery, two hundred years after legislation was passed which made the practice illegal. And this is slavery at its ugliest, most evil core, slavery of the most vulnerable among us: children.

Child laborers and prostitutes exist in such large numbers for a very simple, yet horrific, reason: they are cheap commodities. They can be paid the least, exploited the most, and due to the largely invisible status of the most vulnerable children, have virtually no power against their oppressors. Children cost less than cattle; a cow or buffalo costs an average 20,000 rupees, but a child can be bought and traded like an animal for 500 to 2,000 rupees.

While factories in China and Central America that exploit children are often in the news, India is the largest example of a country plagued by this human rights abuse, with the highest number of child laborers in the world. Official estimates of these children vary greatly, often by definition of who such children are. The UNICEF website reports 12.6 million children engaged in hazardous occupations, but this figure is according to the official 2001 Census; because more than half of all children born in India are never registered, it may safely be assumed that this number is extremely low. However, UNICEF's 2006 State of the World's Children briefing states that an estimated 171 million children, of which 73 million are under ten years old are working in hazardous conditions, missing out on an education and facing serious risks of injury, illness and death.

The Global March Against Child Labor says as many as 100 million children are believed to be working, "many under conditions akin to slavery," with an estimated fifteen million in bonded servitude. Bonded labor or servitude is defined as child labor in which children are indentured in order to pay off a debt. Few sources of credit or bank loans exist for those living in poverty qualify. The earnings of the bonded children are less than the interest on the loans, ensuring that they will typically never be able to pay off the debt. Thus, they become in effect a slave of the "employer."

Often families themselves place children in such conditions when they feel they have


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Child trafficking and slave labor in India

  • 1 of 1

    by Shelley Seale

    Lost and Found - Child Laborers

    Child trafficking, indentured servitude, factory labor and the sex trade, comprise an "industry"

    read more

Add your voice

Know something about Child trafficking and slave labor in India?
We want to hear your view. Write_penWrite now!

Helium Debate

Cast your vote!

Should the U.S. send more troops to afghanistan?

Click for your side.

126621

Featured Partner

OMB Watch

OMB Watch exists to increase government transparency and accountability; to ensure sound, equitable regulatory and bu...more

What is Helium? | Buy Web Content | Contact Us | Privacy | User agreement | DMCA | User Tools | Help | Community | Helium’s Official Blog | Link to Helium

Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA