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UP carpet loom is doom for kids

TimePublished on Thu, Nov 09, 2006 at 09:08, Updated on Thu, Nov 09, 2006 at 20:11 in Nation section


KNOT FOR CHILDREN
bulletThough carpet weaving is spread over different parts of the country, the name 'carpet industry' has become synonymous with the Mirzapur-Bhadohi belt.
bullet The region is fast gaining notoriety as the sweatshop in UP's dingy backyards that employs thousands of children under 13 years of age.
bulletAlmost 80 per cent of carpets exported from India come from this belt comprising of three core districts of Bhadohi, Mirzapur and Varanasi. The four adjacent districts of Allahabad, Koshambi, Jaunpur and Sonebhadra are also at the periphery.
bullet There has recently been a shift of work from the core carpet belt to the adjoining districts of Bihar like Garhwa, Samastipur, Palamau, Madhubani and Saharsa in north Bihar.

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The carpet factory owners and manufacturers are not just exploiting the children, they are also exploiting a glaring loophole in the Indian law.

Legally, children working at home or even in a hazardous industry like carpet weaving are not called “child labourers”. That’s a loophole in the law working to the advantage of these manufacturers.

Instead of setting up looms in factories and hiring adults, they contract work to families who then put children to work.

The minimum wage law, too, is broken with impunity. Contractors treat a family as a single laborer, even though it’s known that the whole family is involved.

“Everything is hand woven. This is the pity that I employ a person but if he makes a mistake, I cannot kick him out. How? In what law?” says the owner of East-West Trading Corp, Avinash Baranwal.

CNN-IBN Special Investigation Team shot extensively with a hidden camera in the area and found children working in almost every set up.

“The biggest culprits are our bureaucrats and nobody is raising a finger. If tomorrow you make them responsible for the implementation of the act, you will see a sea change, a drastic change,” says child rights activist, Swami Agnivesh.,

The closer look at the economy of the carpet industry also throws up certain interesting details. A carpet that sells for over Rs 1 lakh in Europe, takes a family of three nearly four months to weave.

They get Rs 8,000 for the job - which is just 22 rupees a day - while the law sets a limit of Rs 120 per day.

The carpet export industry had a massive turnover of Rs 2,750 crore from handmade carpets last year, but deep at the root of this glittering facade lie the toil and tears of hundreds of children.

(With Mridu Bhandari and inputs from IBNLive.com)

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