MIRPURKHAS [Sindh, Pakistan]: Acting upon a court order, Phuladyoon police on Wednesday carried out a raid on the farmland of Allah Bachayo Khaskheli and recovered peasants and their families found forced to work without wages or share in crop.
Long Kolhi had submitted an application in the Mirpurkhas district and sessions court stating that his 34 relatives had been forced into bonded labour by the landowner. He prayed to the court to get them recovered through police.
The police carried out the raid and brought them to the Phuladyoon police station.
They said the liberated peasant families would be produce in the court on Thursday.
Published by Daily Dawn on Feb 6, 2014
Category Archives: Programmes
In 2013, 1871 bonded labourers including 425 women and 944 children were released and rescued in Pakistan
Islamabad: The Institute for Social Justice (ISJ) said that 2013 was another tough year for bonded labourers mainly in agriculture and brick kiln sectors in Sindh and Punjab. However, few of them were released and rescued by the police on the directions of the courts.
Pakistan: Rescued & released bonded labourers in 2013 |
||||
|
Men |
Women |
Children |
Total |
Sindh |
345 |
264 |
651 |
1260 |
Punjab |
152 |
153 |
272 |
577 |
KP |
5 |
8 |
21 |
34 |
Balochistan |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Total |
502 |
425 |
944 |
1871 |
Source: Media Reports gathered by the ISJ |
According to the data collected by the ISJ, in 2013, 1871 bonded including 425 women and 944 children were released on the directions of courts by the police. It includes 32 those children who were directly rescued by the police and FIRs (First Information Reports) were lodged by the police. They were found chained and detained by their masters for forced labour and begging. These figures do not include bonded labourers who escaped from the custody of landlords and also those who were released with the help of NGOs.
In majority of the reported cases of release and rescued by the police, FIRs are not lodged against the landlords or masters, therefore, the business of debt bondage or contemporary form of slavery go unpunished, and keeps flourishing.
Of the total, 1260 bonded labourers were released from Sindh, 577 from Punjab, 34 from Khyber Pkahunkhwa and none from Balochistan.
The ISJ showed concerns that on the Global Slavery Index (GSI) 2013 by the Walk Free Foundation, Pakistan is one of the most populous countries with contemporary form of slaves including bonded labourers but the findings of the report went uncheck and unnoticed by the authorities in Pakistan. The GSI provides a gloomy picture of Pakistan. Of the total 29.8 million modern slaves in the world, 2.2 million (7 percent) modern slaves are in Pakistan. These slaves are abused, exploited, raped, tortured and killed which go unnoticed generally. Of the ten most populous countries with modern slave, Pakistan is on number three after India and China with the prevalence of highest modern slaves. It is upsetting to note that countries like Sri Lanka and Afghanistan which have remained under a war for a long time but there is low prevalence of modern slaves.
The ISJ press statement said that it is not merely poverty that is blamed but in real terms it is the will and commitment of federal and provincial governments that have yet not taken birth therefore slavery and debt bondage is common in the country.
In 2012, during the Universal Periodic Review, Ireland had recommended Pakistan to develop a clear implementation and monitoring plan for the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1992, the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Rules, 1995 and the National Policy and Plan of Action for the Abolition of Bonded Labour, 2001. The ISJ said that Pakistan had accepted Irelands’ recommendation; now, not only the federal government but after the 18th Constitutional Amendment in 2010, the provincial governments should expeditiously enforce the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1992, prepare provincial policies and plans of action and allocate funds for the rehabilitation of released or escaped bonded labourers.
The press statement further said that the most important and urgent action is required to lodge FIRs against culprits this will ensure for strong and effective deterrence from committing the crime of slavery.
Abolition of Slavery
The Constitution of Pakistan in Article 11 states that (1) Slavery is non-existent and forbidden and no law shall permit or facilitate its introduction into Pakistan in any form; (2) All forms of forced labour and traffic in human beings are prohibited; (3) No child below the age of fourteen years shall be engaged in any factory or mine or any other hazardous employment. In 992, the Bonded Labour (Abolition) System Act (BLASA), 1992, was enacted and in 1995, its Rules were formulated, and in 2002 the Prevention and Control of Human Trafficking Ordinance was enacted but unfortunately neither the BLASA nor the constitutional guarantees have brought any justice in the lives of millions of haris (share croppers), bonded labourers, forced labourers, child domestic labourers, slaves in mines and factories, women domestic servitudes, and victims of human trafficking and forced marriages. They are victims of sheer physical and psychological abuse and economic exploitation. There is surge in cases of people including bonded labourers who are selling their kidneys, other organs and their children in a desperate bid to pay off debts. In 2003, in one of the districts of Punjab, about 300 bonded labourers had sold their kidneys to pay off their debts.
There are various CSOs in Pakistan that claim to be suporter of bonded labourers and thier families in their release from the captivity of masters/landlords. Some estimate that millions of bonded labourers have been released. There is no record of such interventions. However, in the HRCP’s annual reports, there are recorded 21108 bonded labourers and their families released from the captivity.
With the increasing population, unemployment, poverty, war, natural and human-made emergencies, there has been greater chances of increased in the number of bonded labourers in comparison to studies conducted a decade ago which recorded about 17 million bonded labourers only in agriculture sector. There are reported to more than 13,000 brick kilns in the country which employed about one million labourers, including women and children. Majority of them were bonded labourers through an illegal advance payment system.
In 2001, there were reported about 200,000 women trafficked to Pakistan from Bangladesh, Nepal, Burma. These women were used as sex workers or as bonded labourers. It is being feared that the number of women trafficked have increased due to poverty and no respects of human beings mainly of women being.
In Pakistan, there are estimated about 12 million women including under-age girls all over Pakistan as domestic servants and 264,000 estimated to be child domestic workers working in hazardous and deplorable conditions. In 2010 and 2011, newspapers reported about 18 cases of severe torture and abuse of child domestic workers, of which about 13 children were reported dead due to direct result of violence inflicted on them by their employers.
A majority of bonded or forced labourers in Pakistan belong to religious, low-caste minorities, and low income and disadvantaged groups. These are easy to be sold and bought by employers (please see more details in our policy paper).
Objectives
The ISJ’s have three objectives linked with the main goal of ‘abolition of slavery’. These are:
-Implementation of existing laws and amendment of laws to introduce stringent and mandatory provisions against all forms, types, kinds and levels of slavery;
-Establishment of independent monitoring institutions which could effective ensures monitoring of the implementation of anti slavery laws;
-Re-activate the dead issue of slavery which has been dead for a couple of years;
Strategies
In order to achieve three objectives, the ISJ aims to:
-Help slave people through legal and knowledge based support;
-Raise mass awareness though campaigns, i.e. letter, postcard and signature, media;
-Train, educate and sensitize judges, police officials and employers/landlords;
-Review laws and propose amendments to fill gaps in laws
-Take legal and other possible actions against reported cases of various forms and types of slaveries;
-Conduct fact findings of potential areas of slave trade and other associated activities.
Judicial Justice!
From judicial justice means a justice being done through formal judicial court systems which in Pakistan has not been able to provide justice to people. Judicial justice is an open opportunity for rich and influential people. They can buy officials, influence the court procedure and fair trial which usually results in delayed in justice or denied justice. A poor invariably remained at the verge of injustice due to serious corruption at all levels but hardly accepted by the holder of judicial justice and such open allegation is always supposed tantamount to contempt of judiciary. The usual miscarriage of justice comes from a number of factors which lead to increase in crimes with more severity and big scale, from a single murder to mass murder, from few rupees theft to billion dollars heist, from low level corruption to extreme levels of corruption, from loyalty to disloyalty. Therefore, people try to do justice by their own ways (mob justice), do informal jirgas/panchayts in which poor and marginalized section of society such as women, children, low caste and low income poor families are victimized.
The ISJ aims to advocate for fair judicial justice set up, mechanism and system where all are treated equal before the law and no one is deprived of his/her social, economic, civil, cultural and political rights (please see the Judicial Justice policy paper for more details).
Tax Justice!
Tax justice is a core programme of the ISJ’s programme because through tax justice transparency in national, provincial and district level finance can be achieved which prohibits or prevents from secrecy or safe tax havens. The ISJ believes that transparency and openness in finance can help to reduce poverty and eliminate social injustice whereas secrecy leads to corruption, misappropriations and social injustice.
Unfortunately as the problem of tax injustice is so big and complex in Pakistan, so it is hardly being touched by CSOs. There are serious gaps and distortions in taxes and their regulations which infer grave violations and exploitations of humans and financial resources in Pakistan.
Objectives
The ISJ would like to see complete tax compliance by all politicians, businessmen, industrialists, foreign investors and every citizen; therefore, it is categorically against the tax evasion and all the systems and mechanisms that allow or facilitate politicians, parliamentarians, bureaucrats, bankers, feudal lords, chudharies, businessmen, industrialists, investors, companies and all individuals who have controllers over wealth.
The ISJ believes such escape from taxes is denial of their responsibilities to the societies on which they and their wealth depend (please check out policy paper for more details). At the same time, poor people are burdened with unending taxes (direct and indirect) on basic food related items and life saving drugs.
Strategies
The ISJ aims to raise mass awareness amongst public through extensive research-evidence based campaigns, seminars and workshops so that a common person should question, protest and get involved into movement for a transparent tax system and justice.
Useful links:
-Wikipedia
-Tax Justice Net