Bonded labour is a form of forced labour where due to a debt or other obligation, the labourer forfeits certain freedoms and rights. This leaves them vulnerable to many abuses including physical, sexual and mental abuse.
Bonded labour was abolished in 1976. However, it is still thriving in many industries under different names and forms. It is, in fact, growing at an alarming rate with vulnerable people being trafficked across states and being held in bondage working in places where they know no one and do not speak the language leaving them unable to seek help. However, people continue to be bonded in their own home towns/nearby districts too.
Yes, India has specific laws on the books outlawing bonded labour and regulating fair labour practices including…
In addition, Articles 21, 23, 39, 42, and 43 of the Constitution of India, all include regulations and prohibitions related to bonded labour.
Employers convicted of bonded labour and abuses surrounding the crime of bonded labour have received sentences as long as seven years and were fined as much as Rs. 1,07,000.
These are a few indicators that someone may be trapped in a bonded labour situation…
Yes. It involves harbouring a person for the purpose of exploitation.
Report it to the police. Bonded labour is a crime and should be reported as such.
Bonded labour can be found in any industry. Here are some industries we know labourers have been rescued from: