India is the world’s child labour capital -- kids as young as five are
sold to traffickers and forced to work as modern-day slaves, abused and beaten.
The historic new bill would ban outright any child labour under 14 and provide
stipends for poor families to keep their children in school. But MPs have let
it fall off their agenda, and Indian child rights groups say they badly need
our help, now, to ramp up the public pressure.
If the Avaaz community comes together, we can create a wave of attention to the
bill, and push MPs to vote. Sign this urgent petition and forward it widely
-- when we reach 1 million we’ll deliver our message to the Parliament with former
child workers:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/india_child_labour_g1/?brOLxdb&v=20360
A staggering 215 million children work in mines, quarries, and factories
around the world. All nations have signed an agreement to put the
eradication of child labour at the heart of their national education plans. But,
India is home to the largest child labour force in the world. If the new
law passes, it would ban all child labour for under 14-year-olds and all
harmful work for under 18s. The law even has provisions to ensure it doesn’t
hurt the poorest families -- enshrining the right to free education and
proposing stipends to compensate any losses.
Critics say the real problem isn’t the law, it’s bad enforcement. And
it’s true that in the last three years in India less than 10% of the 450,000
reports of child labour were prosecuted under the existing, weak, law. But
the new law packs some serious punch. The police will no longer have to
wait for a court order to act. All forms of commercial child labour under 14
will be criminalised, and instead of meaningless fines or short prison
sentences, the criminals will face tough penalties.
While the majority of MPs say they'll support the bill, there's no political
urgency to bring it to a vote. But each day they delay, more children are
forced into a life of sweatshop misery. It’s up to us to push them over the
edge. Sign the petition to India's MPs now, and share widely:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/india_child_labour_g1/?brOLxdb&v=20360
The Avaaz community has campaigned to protect the children and the most
vulnerable, time and time again. Just weeks ago, 1.2 million of us got together
to help pass the most comprehensive education plan in Pakistan. How we treat
our children is a reflection on our moral compass -- and it´s time to take firm
steps against their abuse. Let’s join together to speak out for the future of
India’s suffering children.
With hope and determination,
Avaaz team
Advice from http://www.avaaz.org/en/