Sexual abuse plagues sugarcane field female workers – Probe into child deaths cover-up

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DELHI/MUMBAI, India, Aug 4, (Agencies): Indian officials launched investigations on Wednesday into child deaths in India’s mica mines after the Thomson Reuters Foundation revealed children were being killed in illegal mines and their deaths covered up.

A three-month investigation in the mica-producing states of Bihar, Jharkhand, Rajasthan and Andhra Pradesh found at least seven children have been killed since June, mining for mica, the valued mineral that puts a sparkle in make-up and car paint.

But these deaths have gone unreported as victims’ families and mine operators do not want to end the illegal mining that is the only source of income in some of India’s poorest regions. Nobel laureate Kailash Satyarthi’s child protection group Bachpan Bachao Andolan (BBA) said these deaths in unregulated mines falling into disrepair were just the tip of the iceberg and estimated fewer than 10 percent of mica deaths are reported. Jharkhand’s Minister of Labour, Raj Paliwar, said on Wednesday he was launching an investigation immediately.

“I have ordered a probe. I have directed the Labour Commissioner to investigate and submit a report,” Paliwar told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “Children engaged by anybody as child labourers is illegal and we will take strong action against such people whoever they may be and however powerful they are.”

Iqbal Khan, joint Secretary of Mines in Rajasthan, said the authorities were unaware of child workers in mica but would investigate.

“We will look into the matter and take necessary action,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. Other Indian officials expressed concern about the deaths of children in mining of mica, a grey, crystalline mineral that has gained prominence in recent years as an environmentally- friendly material, used by major global brands in the car and building sectors, electronics and make-up.

India is one of the world’s largest producers of mica but it is estimated 70 percent of its output comes from illegal mines, many abandoned in the 1980s and 1990s due to stricter laws on deforestation and the discovery of lower cost mica substitutes. By law children in India below the age of 18 cannot work in mines and other hazardous industries but many families living in extreme poverty rely on children to boost household income.

Investigations by the Thomson Reuters Foundation found children working in and around mica mines in northern Jharkhand, southern Bihar and in Rajasthan in India’s northwest. Dutch campaign group SOMO estimates up to 20,000 children are involved in mica mining in Jharkhand and Bihar. Y.S. Kataria, spokesman for the Ministry of Mines, said child labour in mica mines was a serious issue.

Kariya Munda, parliamentarian for the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party from Jharkhand state, voiced his concern but also expressed the difficulty in tackling this issue with illegal mining the lifeline for many families. State governments in India are facing pressure from mining companies and activists to grant licences to illegal mines to crack down on the black market and child labour in mica but also provide training in other industries and schooling.

Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia Director of Human Rights Watch, said this investigation exposed concerns both about right abuses around illegal mining and the risk to child workers.

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