Carpet Industry Child Labour
The horrific practice of child labor exists in many other industries as well including cotton production sandstone quarries garment making chocolate shoes tobacco bananas jewelry production etc.
Carpet industry child labour. It is important to be aware that the rug and carpet industry is not the only perpetrator of child and bonded labor. Child labor in the carpet industry carpet manufacturers and the carpet export industry in pakistan as well as carpet importers and retailers in the usa and other western countries have announced that child labor no longer exists in the carpet weaving industry. Under the child labour act of 1986 prohibition and regulation the indian government has prohibited employment of children in the carpet industry. Following his death pakistani economic elites responded to declining carpet sales by denying the use of bonded child labour in their factories and employing the federal investigation agency fia to brutally harass and arrest activists working for the bonded labour liberation front bllf.
The act has recognized the industry as a hazardous process for employing children under the age of 14 years. During the past 20 years it has been one of the fastest growing industries and most of this growth has been achieved through the use of child labor. Workshop owners manipulate parents into believing that their children will learn new skills that outweigh any knowledge gained at school. The issue of child labor should rank top.
So what s being done to. Unicef united nations children s fund believes that children aged 4 to 14 make up to 90 percent of the carpet industry s workforce. The handmade woolen carpet industry is extremely labor intensive and one of the largest export earners for india pakistan nepal and morocco. Child labour sex education employment family dropout carpet industry.
But at the same time child labor is practiced all over the world that it has come to be known as a necessary evil in some places. Children work long hours for very little pay. To fill this gap an attempt is made in the present study to understand various determinants of child labour in the home based carpet weaving industry of kashmir and suggest some alternative policy prescriptions such that the parents themselves will withdraw their children from the labour market and enroll them in schools which in turn will help to reduce child labour.