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♪ (music) ♪
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♪ (Indian music) ♪
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We used to get up at midnight 12 or 1 am
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and work through the day
making clay ready for molding.
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We lined up the brick for drying
and changed bricks sides later
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I like reading,
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but my father had to take me
to the brick kiln to work
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as he did not have money.
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The children in the brick kilns
are getting punished in many ways
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Children are denied
their basic right to education--
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whether they are working
or not in the kilns.
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The children's health
is significantly affected
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and in a bad situation.
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One of my sons is 14 years old,
another is 9, and the third one is 7.
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Children have to work at any cost,
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what would they eat if they don't work?
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The water is so bad.
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Neither we can wash utensils, nor the clothes.
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It's stagnant, dirty water,
good for nothing.
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We wake up at 1 at night,
start working and later we cook and eat.
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We rest for two hours
and then start the work again.
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We prepare the clay for molding
and molding bricks into the cases.
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♪ (music) ♪
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Anti-Slavery International have worked
to address force labor and child labor
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in brick kiln industry
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and we work on both source state
and destination
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with seasonal migrants
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We work in three states: Chhattisgarh,
Uttar Pradesh, and Punjab.
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I have four children.
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All of them have gone to Punjab
to work in brick kilns.
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I stay alone at home here.
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We can't survive on the land
as we have very little
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and that is why people go to other places
to earn and make a living.
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The government have done nothing.
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What can it do?
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Whatever food supply comes in,
the dealers take it all.
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They are forced to migrate
to escape a starving situation.
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they barely survive
and return with nothing.
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So this is the ongoing--
it's a cyclic problem.
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INcreasingly, there is a denial.
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I mean there has always been denial
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of the existence
of the bonded labor system.
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And that has not changed,
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and in fact it has become even more worse
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because the form of bondage is changing,
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and if the government
doesn't keep up with that,
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then we cannot address
the problem of bondage.
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How they cannot leave the kiln.
There is no boundary there?
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They are still speaking
the old language of bondage
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as physically curtailing workers
from leaving the kiln.
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Their freedoms are still curtailed,
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nut the means that are used are different.
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It is withholding their wages
with the implied threats.
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from the contractors
and from the brick kiln owners.
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♪ (music) ♪
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After working for several decades
on bondage in brick kiln industry
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we realized that a lot
of these issues and problems
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arise from the system of wages
that exists in brick kiln industry.
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Piece rate wage system,
only the bricks count;
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the human beings dont't count.
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Workers are paid for the 1,000 bricks
that they mold.
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It does not matter how many hands
go into making that 1,000 bricks.
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or how many hours go
into making that 1,000 bricks
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and that is what exists
in the brick kiln industry.
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Because of which women are invisible.
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they are never paid.
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Children are forced to work.
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Child labor is incentivized.
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If you don't put children to work
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then you can't complete
the kind of production required
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to earn the minimum wage.
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♪ (music) ♪
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Brick molders, loaders,
brick firemen, brick pullers--
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none of us got any money for our work.
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they told us they will pay
the money in the brick kiln.
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We went there and worked,
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but they didn't pay us money.
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I have three children,
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one year and four year old girls
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and a four year old son.
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They all had to come with me.
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We reached such a helpless stage
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that we did not have even a penny with us.
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We kept molding bricks
and completed the work,
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but we were not given any money.
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We did not have anything to eat there.
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Women face most problems in brick kilns.
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They do not have toilets or bathrooms.
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There is no privacy in the brick kilns
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which is most important for them.
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Women's work is never accounted for
or considered as work.
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They never get the returns
of their work in their hands.
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Women have never been considered
as a worker.
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We have been working for him
for the last three years,
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and he hasn't paid anything
or settled our payments so far.
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This year, we did not go
to his brick kiln.
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He has filed case on us
for an amount of 125,000 rupees.
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He sends the police
to our home twice every day,
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abuses and threatens to hurt my children
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and make them incapable of work.
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He calls me up and abuses
in filthy language
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and threatens to abduct my daughters.
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Twelve members of our family
worked in the kiln.
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We used to take the baked bricks out
and stack them.
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All of us worked
day and night in the kiln.
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We were made to take out
really hot bricks.
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Only the hands and hearts of our children
know how hot were those bricks.
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He made us take out extremely hot bricks
that our hands got burned.
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Our children weren't able to use
their hands to even eat food.
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The police came and tell us
to pay him the money.
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they ask me why I am not paying the money.
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He has filed a false case afainst us.
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Where would we get the money from?
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The state machinery,
especially the police,
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punishes the people.
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The magistrates, even they do not know
the definition of bonded labor.
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They will always say,
he is not a bonded laborer.
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How he has come to my court?
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He is not chained.
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He is not kept in captivitiy.
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So how can you claim
that he is a bonded laborer?
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And dismiss the petitions filed by NGOs,
filed by the bonded laborers.
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and that is a big hindrance
to get justice.
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♪ (music) ♪
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We recognize that whilst
the Indian economy
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has grown and developed
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the benefits of this growth
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hasn't trickled down
to the people at the bottom.
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The workers that we work with
are in severe debt bondage
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and their children are in child labor
in the brick kilns.
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To address this, we really need
to work systemically
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and for the long term
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to really tackle these issues.
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So, we undertake legal measures,
we fight legal cases.
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We try and advocate for change
at the governmental level
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and with owners,
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We work to build worker movements
and people movements
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that will be sustainable
in fighting slavery.
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and we work with the communities affected
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to make them less vulnerable
to these types of slavery.
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♪ (music) ♪
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♪ (music) ♪