Female labourers are sexually assaulted by supervisors and landowners |
Every year after the
monsoon, Gouri Bhiwde and her husband joined tens of thousands of workers
migrating to the west of India's Maharashtra state to cut sugarcane.
Thomson
Reuters Foundation report continues:
Every
year, Bhiwde and other female labourers were sexually assaulted by supervisors
and landowners, she said.
After
one difficult pregnancy, Bhiwde's husband and his family took her to a doctor,
who advised her to have a hysterectomy to prevent any further complications.
"The
doctor said, 'let's take it out'," Bhiwde said by telephone from her
village in Beed district.
"He
said, it'll only cause trouble."
Female
workers in western Maharashtra's sugarcane fields routinely face abuse and rape
by landlords and middlemen who enslave them through debt bondage, activists
say.
They
said women are often forced by their families to undergo sterilization or a
hysterectomy so they do not get pregnant from the repeated abuse, and can work
without a break.
"It
is an unimaginable violation," said Nirja Bhatnagar, regional manager at
ActionAid in Mumbai, which has surveyed dozens of female sugarcane cutters in
Beed district.
"There
is no human rights violation worse than having to remove your uterus so you can
enter an informal economy that does not care for you," said Bhatnagar.
However,
a spokesman for the sugar factories' cooperative denied that women are abused.
"We
have not heard of any such instances," said Sriramji Shete, a vice
chairman of the Maharashtra State Co-operative Sugar Factories Federation.
"If
they are unhappy with the wages or the conditions, why would they keep coming
back?" he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
India
is the world's second-largest sugar producer. In Maharashtra, India's top
producing state, about 500,000 rural poor migrate to Beed, Solapur, Kolhapur,
Sangli and Satara districts every year to cut sugarcane.
The
workers are hired as couples. Most are in debt bondage, receiving about 50,000
to 60,000 rupees (US$745 to US$895) from a middleman as an advance against
working for six to eight months.
At
the end of that period, the workers are often told they still owe money, and
that they must return the next season, activists say.
'RESIGNED TO THEIR FATE'
During
the harvesting season, which runs from November to May, migrant workers erect
flimsy shacks of straw and plastic to live in. There is no running water,
electricity or toilets.
The
cutter couples, sometimes accompanied by their older children, work from about
4 a.m. to late afternoon. They then carry heavy loads of sugarcane and stack
them in carts drawn by bulls that take them to the factories for crushing.
There
may be a doctor to tend to cuts and injuries, but workers must take care of
major illnesses - and pregnancies, campaigners said.
Child
labour is rampant, and because only couples are hired, girls are married before
the legal age of 18, said an activist who works in Satara.
The
women often suffer miscarriages and those with children are told that
sterilization or a hysterectomy is the only fix, she said.
"It
is the worst form of slave labour, and women suffer the brunt of it," said
the activist who spoke on condition of anonymity as she did not want to get the
workers in trouble.
"You
can't really blame the family - they are resigned to their fate. They know
there is abuse, but they know they must work," she said.
ActionAid's
Bhatnagar and the activist said they had met doctors who perform
hysterectomies. The procedure costs about 35,000 rupees (US$525), and sink the
poor family further in debt.
The
women are generally unaware of the risks of doing hard manual labour soon after
the surgery, and the effects of the procedure at a young age, they said.
Calls
to a doctor in Beed went unanswered.
Unionizing
the workers may give them a voice and some protection, but these efforts are
opposed by the sugar lobby, with many factories owned by wealthy politicians,
activists say.
"There
are laws against bonded labour and against abuse, but these are poor, low-caste
workers who are afraid of the higher-caste owners," said Flavia Agnes, a
co-founder of women's rights organization Majlis in Mumbai.
"They
have to go back to the same fields to work. They have no option," she
said.
(US$1
= 67.05 Indian rupees)
No comments:
Post a Comment