UP carpet loom is doom for kids
Published on Thu, Nov 09, 2006 at 09:08, Updated at Thu, Nov 09, 2006 in Nation section
Tags: Child Interrupted, Child Labour
KNOT FOR CHILDREN |
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With 23 million child labourers, India is the sixth most unsafe country in the world for children. From cracker industry to weaving carpets to being exploited as domestic helps, the unfortunate face of childhood in India largely goes unnoticed.
Leading up to Children's Day on November 14, CNN-IBN brings a series of stories on such children in a special series Child, Interrupted!
Mirzapur: Uttar Pradesh's Mirzapur and Bhadohi districts are the two flashpoints in India’s carpet weaving belt, contributing crores to the nation’s economy.
However, behind the glitter of a thriving cottage industry and a booming local economy are young children who work day in and day out on looms, getting little or sometimes no wages at all.
Despite a 20-year-old ban, the children brave the heat, dust and the unhygienic conditions and continue to toil in the looms that dot the countryside.
“I work from seven in the morning to midnight and earn Rs 5 per day,” says a child worker Mukesh.
For the likes of Mukesh, even this paltry salary comes at a huge price. At least four to five children sit on the wooden planks of the looms, weaving carpets for about 10 hours everyday.
The dank, shack-like looms have very poor ventilation and no sign of electricity. As a result, most of these children suffer from poor eyesight and tend to fall ill often.
“I get blisters on my hands due to weaving and it pains a lot,” says another child worker in Mirzapur’s factory, Anil.
Shockingly, it’s not just the hazardous conditions that children have even been trained to survive, they have also been tutored to lie about their age by the looms.
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