11 - Chapter 4
11 - Chapter 4
11 - Chapter 4
root cause of this problem, and enforcement alone cannot help it,
combat child labour. This chapter also examines the stand to Union
check the problem of child labour. Apart from it, the chapter also
CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS
provided -
2
in
3
human beings‘ means selling and buying men and women like
not only against the State but also private citizens. It imposes a
article.
and seeks to ensure that they are not forced by economic necessity
4
within the time limit of
5
10 years. Eight years of education to all children in the age group of
6-
child or ward as the case may be between the age of six and
fourteen years.
are also made in the Indian Constitution that also address the issue
want.
7
children in arduous socio-economic conditions can be prevented
the child well-being are read together, they have a potential for
exploitation.
8
LEGISLATIVE MEASURES
rights of child. There are more than 250 central and state Laws in
1881. This act was known as the Indian Factories Act, 1881. This
be given to them. In addition, the act made the provisions for safety
the Act of 1881. Under the Act of 1891, the lower age was extended
9
to work at night. However, the exploitation increased because the
attention was not paid to the provisions of the Act due to the
labourers was the passing of the Mines Act, in 1901. The Mines Act
The next step in the history of child labour law was the Indian
physical fitness for the employment. The working hours were fixed
children employed
10
for more than 5½ hours. The inspectors were empowered to
these Acts, persons below the age of 16 years of age shall not be
the evils arising from the pledging of the labour of young children
11
prohibited the employment of children under 15 in mines. This
Amendment Act further laid down that adolescent, i.e., the young
of this Act continues till now. This Act prohibits the employment of
its goal
12
– the elimination of the evils of child labour. The Labour
p.m. – 6 a.m.) between 14 and 15 years for not more than 42 hours
in any day, only one shift and in one factory. The Act prohibits
The Act lays down that, children who have not completed 12
required
13
to obtain a certificate of fitness (valid for a period of one year at a
adolescents will not be employed for more than 4.5 hours a day.
Act includes all excavations where any operation for the purpose of
searching is carried out. The Act not only prohibits the presence of
below ground, unless he has completed his 16th year and has a
for 12 months.
14
THE MERCHANT SHIPPING ACT, 1958
less than two hundred tons gross; or (d) where such person is to be
granted, which is valid only for one year. An adolescent can work
between 10
aid, ventilation, and cleaning are also made under the Act.
15
STATE SHOPS AND COMMERCIAL ESTABLISHMENT ACT, 1969
and hotels and places of amusement and notified urban areas etc.
Pradesh, West Bengal, Goa, Daman and Diu, and Manipur, and 14
10
p.m. and 6 a.m. The Act applies to such areas or industries as may
16
THE CHILD LABOUR (PROHIBITION AND REGULATION) ACT, 1986
processes,
93 National Commission on Labour, 1969, the Committee on Child Labour ,1979, the
Gurupadswamy Committee on Child Labour, 1979, and the Sanat Mehta Committee
,1984.
17
Main Provisions of Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation)
Act, 1986
Act prohibits the employment of any person who has not completed
prohibited, and
regulated.
receiving
14
94 Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation ) Act, 1986, Section 3
95 Ibid, Section 4
96 Ibid, Section 5
14
assistance or recognition from government.
out. It provides for the hours and period work and weekly holidays
for the children. The period of work on each day shall be so fixed
that no period shall exceed three hours and no child shall work for
more than three hours before he has an interval forest for at least
one hour.97 The total period of work inclusive of the interval for rest
should not be more than six hours. The child is not permitted to
country. The Preamble of the Juvenile Justice Act, 1986 (JJA 1986)
states that the Act is to provide for the care, protection, treatment,
of delinquent juveniles.
14
The objectives of the Juvenile Justice Act, 1986 were the
following:
juvenile justice,
who has not attained the age of sixteen years or a girl who has not
neglected juvenile is a
14
99 Juvenile Justice Act, 1986, Section 2(h)
14
very wide term and includes a juvenile who is found begging, 100 or
the land and comes in conflict with law. The Juvenile Welfare Board
and the need for a more friendly juvenile justice system were some
of the factors that led to the enactment of the Juvenile Justice (Care
and by adopting a
14
child-friendly approach in the adjudication and disposition of
enactment.
an offence [Section
105 Shanta Sinha, Need for National Commitment, Yojna, Publication Division,
14
Soochna Bhawan, Delhi, November 2008.
14
The World Conferences on 'Education for All' conducted at
said, "if we nurture the children of our country and young people
with the civil society and all others concerned to work towards
15
the country is in school and is able to get at least eight years of
that their wards who hope to get free education under the umbrella
up to VII standard;
15
Maintenance of teacher-student ratio as per prescribed
rate or building grants of any kind, will receive a subsidy from the
government towards the fees of these children "to the extent of per
provision of the Act. "There are states where the government has
Government does not have the resources to pay the salaries for a
108 Ibid
109 Harish Dhillon, "Bright but less privileged", The Tribune, May 4, 2010
110 Ibid
15
There are two types of private school in operation in the
country, the one is the old public schools where every penny that
to the children. These schools, obviously, will not have any extra
funds to cope with this shortfall. There is the other group of private
commercial ventures.111
or who received any kind of grant towards the buildings, will not
receive any subsidy and will have to generate the entire fees of this
25 per sections. But here, too, an increase of even five per section
The other possible solution to the problem, and one that most
Ibid
15
full
111 Ibid
112
Ibid
15
fee paying students to meet the shortfall created by the
parents who are being asked today for the governments' failure are
the ones who have already paid an education cess along with their
cope with this increase in fees and will be forced to withdraw their
who would otherwise not have enjoyed this benefit, but, in doing so,
114 Ibid
15
115 Ibid
15
that 8 percent of the workers were below 15 years of age, with
Accepting that banning child labour would not remove all the
the
15
116 Asha Singh, "Child Labour Welfare Legislation in India", in M.S. Gupta (ed),
Child Labour: Different Dimensions, Madhav Books, Gurgaon, 2011, p.271.
117 Ibid, pp.271-272.
15
working hours should be reduced, wages should be increased and
1979
details of the causes leading to and the problems arising out of the
recommended:
machinery; and
15
118Ibid
119S.S. Tiwana, "Child Labour in India: An Appraisal", in M. Koteswara Rao (ed),
Exploited Children, Kanishka Publishers, New Delhi, p. 20
15
This Report of the Committee is based on the findings of a
night schools for those who want to continue studies. The Report
towards child labour, besides tightening the laws and activating the
enforcement machinery.120
children, both before and after birth through the period of growth
120 K.D. Gangrade, "Child and the Law", National Seminar on Child and Law,
NIPCED, New Delhi, 1982, p.161.
121 Ibid.
15
Unfortunately, the single comprehensive resolution, namely
the National Policy for Children, 1974, has not been revised to
pertinent to note that though the National Policy for Children did
with respect to the issues of child labour and education, the policy
Board:
15
Review the progress of welfare measures for working
children, and
districts.
122 Samriti Dani, "Child Labour and Government Policies in India‖, in Babita
Agarwal (ed), Child Labour: Issues,
Causes and Intervention, Mahamaya Publishing House, New Delhi, 2008, pp.20-
21.
123 Anoop K. Satpathy, Helen R. Sekar and Anup K. Sekar, Rehabilitation of Child
which has about 650 districts. It is one of the largest child labour
years.
child workers.
expansion of the projects during the Ninth Five year Plan. Around
Rs. 2.5 billion (about US$ 57 million) for these projects during the
15
Development, Education, Labour, Welfare, Information &
15
Health & Family Welfare and Textiles. The main functions of the
NAECL are
under the NCLP at the ground level. The working children are
from the labour force. These children are then enrolled in the
16
124 Ibid, p.3.
16
follow-up of the mainstreamed children for the next few years,
to
departments; and
16
126 Ibid.
16
Technical Advisory Committee for the purpose of addition of
Research.127
127 n. 7, p.21.
16
NATIONAL AUTHORITY FOR THE ELIMINATION OF CHILD
LABOUR-REHABILITATION OF CHILDREN WORKING IN
HAZARDOUS OCCUPATIONS, 1994
and
16
Women and Child Development are members of the National
it
16
128 n. 4, pp.21-22.
129 Ibid
16
in 1992. The long-term objective of International Programme on
INDUS PROJECT
Though the project has ended its term on 30th September, 2008, it
16
130Combating Child Labour in Asia and the ILO-IPEC, Pacific Progress and
Challenges, Thailand, 2005, p.24.
16
and consultancy on labour related issues. The Institute, established
in a global economy;
challenge of change;
matters.
2005 to stand by children, give a call that ‗children come first‘. The
rights and ensuring that the state meets its obligation to protect
legitimate space provided by state for children and all those who
16
vouch for children both in the government and in the civil society.
16
STRATEGY FOR THE ELIMINATION OF CHILD LABOUR UNDER
THE 10TH PLAN
for implementing the scheme during the Tenth plan was devised. 131
16
time bound manner.
spas and other recreational centres. This ban has been imposed
active role to bring back the lost childhood of child labour. Every
132 Ibid.
133 Ibid.
16
STRATEGY FOR THE ELIMINATION OF CHILD LABOUR UNDER
THE 11TH PLAN
The Eleventh Plan emphasises on gender equality and
16
recommended by the Eleventh Plan should include improving the
2005.
children.134
human rights issue and at the same time, it is highly emotive one.
17
what the child labour problem is and on
134Syed Eqbal Afzal and Nibha Kumari, "Child Labour: A Bolt on Society", in M.S.
Gupta (ed), Child Labour: Different Dimensions, Madhav Books, Gurgaon, 2011,
p.121.
17
what ought to be done for its elimination. Although the
and socially disastrous has posed a big threat to peace and overall
recognition that total abolition will take time and that a start has
One of the most important tools available to the ILO and the UNO
exacted from any people under the threat of penalty and for which
135 Asha Bajpai, Child Rights in India: Law, Policy and Practices, Oxford
India Paperbacks, New Delhi, 2011, p.193
136 William E. Myers, "The Rights? Child Labor in a Globalization World",
17
Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 575,
Children's Rights, May 2001, p.44.
137 Ibid.
17
states that no one should be kept in slavery or servitude or be
PROTOCOLS
first half of the 19th century. It was then that the first conventions
general
138 Ibid.
139 Ibid.
140 Arpita Ghosh and Ahana Datta Mukherjee, ―Protection of Child Rights:
17
Concern, Issues and Reality‖, in Subrata Sankar Bagchi (ed.), Expanding
Horizons of Human Rights, Atlantic Publishers, New Delhi, 2009, pp.153-154.
17
protection to children as well as protects them in occupied
on the Rights of the Child must be read within the framework of the
Political Rights (ICCPR), 1966 with its optional protocol and the
(ICESCR), 1966.143
employed in any economic sector below the age designated for the
17
age for admission to any work likely to jeopardize health, safety, or
Child (CRC) is now widely accepted and recognized. The CRC has
and protection of children‘s rights is the starting point for the full
144 n. 1, p-194.
145 India Report on the World Summit for Children, Department of Women and Child
Development, Ministry of Human Resource Development, Government of India,
Delhi, 2000.
146 The Committee comprises ten members elected by the State parties for the
term of four years. The Committee meets three times every year. See M.
O‘Flaberty, the United Nations and Human Rights, Sweet and Maxwell, 1996, p.
17
180.
17
implementation, civil rights of freedom, and special measures of
protection. The first India Country Report on the CRC stated that:
June 2005, the Convention had 192 state parties. It has 54 articles
correspondence.
(Article 38).
18
While the Declaration is a moral and joint commitment, the
Plan sets specific goals for children and development in the 1990-
children.
circumstance.
More than one crore children under the age of five still die
basic schooling.
mandate of,
18
147 n. 32.
18
inter alia, regularly monitoring and evaluating progress in the
and so forth.
A Children‘s Code Bill 2000 (CCB 2000) has been drafted for
Policy and Charter for Children (NPC 2001) has been drawn up.
Policy documents like the ninth Five-Year Plan and population and
148 Ibid
17
1999: CONVENTION No. 182 CONCERNING THE PROHIBITION
AND IMMEDIATE ACTION FOR THE ELIMINATION OF THE
WORST FORMS OF CHILD LABOUR149
On June 17, 1999, this ILO Convention was adopted. The new
Convention defines for the first time what constitutes the ‗worst
labour as:
armed conflict;
pornographic performances;
children.
149
Adopted by the General Conference of the International Labour Organization at its
Eighty-Seventh Session, Geneva, June 17, 1999.
18
The Convention requires ratifying States to ‗design and
says that the ratifying States should ‗provide support for the
removal of children from the worst forms of child labour, and their
training for all children removed from the worst forms of child
labour; identify children at special risk; and take into account the
special situation of
girls‘.
18