PAKISTAN: End Slavery And Bonded Labour
PAKISTAN: End Slavery And Bonded Labour
1. Pakistan's constitution expressly
prohibits all forms of slavery and forced labour. Article 11
deems slavery non-existent and forbidden; no law shall
permit nor facilitate its introduction in Pakistan in any
form; it prohibits all forms of forced labour and
trafficking of human beings and the employment of children
below the age of fourteen years in any factory, mine or in
any form of other hazardous employment. The International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, in its Article 8,
also expressly enshrines provisions against slavery;
providing that; no one shall be held in slavery; that
slavery and the slave-trade in all their forms shall be
prohibited; and that no one shall be held in
servitude.
2. However, Pakistan ranks third in the Global
Slavery Index, which means that the issue of slavery has
reached a critical point. It is estimated that there are
around 2,000,000 -- 2,200,000 people involved in various
forms of modern slavery in Pakistan.[1] Slavery has become
endemic in Pakistan and is generally run by officers of the
law enforcement agencies including the police, para-military
forces, government officers and persons with financial and
political clout in particular by the rich land owners. There
are reports that the military in their detention centres
across the country use girls as sex slaves in order to
obtain confessional statements from people who are forcibly
made to disappear, particularly more so in the Balochistan
province.[2]
3. Forced labour, primarily in the form of
debt bondage, is found most commonly amongst agriculture and
brick kiln workers. In addition, a high number of incidents
of bonded labour are also found in domestic services --
particularly women and children labourers, in the carpet
weaving industry and in mining. In all of the above, with
the exception of the mining industry, women feature as a
major labour force. Since no written contract exists,
workers are made vulnerable to all forms of exploitations.
Bonded labourers mostly hail from socially excluded groups,
including minorities and migrants who suffer additionally
from discrimination and political disenfranchisement.
Trafficking of women and children for the purpose of sex and
the sex industry has become the easiest business which is
made possible only with connivance of the various government
officers posted at the different customs entry and exit
points.
4. Children as young as 5 years-old are kept away
from schools, forced to work 7 days a week for up to 18
hours a day and end up with crippling injuries, respiratory
disorders and chronic pain. A new U.N. study says human
trafficking from and through Pakistan has increased during
the past year. Modern day slavery is a situation where
people are tricked or they are forced into jobs or
situations where they are economically exploited. They are
controlled by violence, forced to live on no pay or base
subsistence pay and they are not free to leave. It reflects
all of the characteristics of slavery of past centuries as
well as forced labour, and slavery-like practices such as
debt bondage, forced marriage, human trafficking and sale or
exploitation of children.
5. Pakistan has ratified
several conventions and international declarations which
prohibit outright any form of slavery, such as the Slavery
Convention of 1926, the ILO Convention, the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, 1948 and the 1956 UN
Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery.
However, the menace of slavery still persists in its
different shades and degrees in today's Pakistan and it is
on the rise, as a means of exploiting for financial gains,
every iota of physical strength of a person
especially.
6. Millions of workers in Pakistan are held
in contemporary forms of slavery. Throughout the country
employers forcibly extract labour from adults and children,
restrict their freedom of movement, and deny them the right
to negotiate the terms of their employment. Employers coerce
such workers into servitude through physical abuse, forced
confinement, and debt-bondage. The state offers these
workers no effective protection from these types of
exploitations on the contrary; state practices actively
support the existence of slavery. The state rarely
prosecutes or punishes employers who hold workers in
servitude. Moreover, workers who contest their exploitation
are invariably confronted with police harassment, often
leading to imprisonment under false charges.
7. The two
main sectors of agriculture and brick kiln industry - that
constitutes the backbone of Pakistan's economy – primarily
rely on bonded or forced labour including child labour.
Millions of domestic servants, mainly debt bonded, provide
crucial services – day and night - to the elite and rich
living in the affluent areas of Pakistan's main cities.
Similarly, millions of children below the age of 18 are
involved in worst forms of labour in sectors like auto
workshops, carpet weaving, hotels, restaurants, mining and
waste collection. Thousands of these children are also
subjected to begging and sexual exploitation, and forcible
recruitment into extremist and non-state militant groups.
Forced and early marriages of girls are a socially
acceptable practice in many parts of Pakistan. Girls under
the age of 18 are often forced into marriages to settle
debts and disputes, under the guise of primitive social and
cultural norms and customs.
8. Women in Pakistan face
significant discrimination and high levels of violence with
proportions as high as four in five women having faced some
sort of domestic abuse. The Prevention of Anti-Women
Practices Bill, that prohibits forced marriages, was passed
in 2011, however no information is available in relation to
its enforcement and there is still much work to be done in
this regard. Women and their daughters becomes a free
commodity for the holders and they rape them and use them
for sex purposes and even trade and sell them to other land
holders.
9. Shocking statistics have emerged with regard
to human trafficking across Pakistan's borders; there have
been 1 million Bangladeshis and more than 200,000 Burmese
women trafficked to Karachi, Pakistan[3]; 200,000
Bangladeshi women were trafficked to Pakistan in the last
ten years, continuing at the rate of 200-400 women
monthly[4]. India and Pakistan both have become the main
destinations for children under 16 who are trafficked in
South Asia[5].
10. Forced labour is a category of
violence that is driven entirely by money and the
willingness to put violence to work as an economic
enterprise. This is a form of strong preying upon the weak.
The most profitable thing to steal is the whole person[6].
Although slavery is prohibited by the constitution, only
some forms of modern slavery have been criminalized and yet,
the few regulations are being poorly implemented. The
haphazard forms of co-ordination between the Central
Government and provincial institutions contribute to
worsening of the quality of mechanisms of monitoring and the
frequency of labour inspections. An effective partnership
between state agencies and NGOs is also lacking.
Furthermore, data collection at a grassroots level and
national surveys are non-existent.
11. The Global Slavery
Index points out that despite the ratification of several
international treaties relevant to the issue of slavery,
such as the Abolition of Forced Labour Convention (1957) and
the Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention (1999), Pakistan
is still lacking in coordinated and adequate policies on the
matter. Although slavery is prohibited by the constitution,
only some forms of modern slavery are criminalised and yet
those few regulations are poorly implemented. The current
startling situation and the increasing number of people
exposed to the risk of slavery have to be attributed mainly
to the expansion of the informal sector within the country,
together with privatization processes. The Formal sector has
been shrinking and the government has lost all its control
over the labour market. The Informal sector prefers to hire
women and children as they represent a source of cheap
labour and their employment allows avoiding labour laws.
They are forced to work between 12 and 16 hours per day and
are paid meagre amounts which are hardly enough for
survival. The Government of Pakistan has failed in the
supervision of the informal sector and hence is directly
responsible for the perpetuation of slavery.
12. Due to
the absence of the rule of law, slavery has become the best
way for commercial and industrial activities to prosper
unethically[7].
13. The government of Pakistan is
complicit in these abuses of worker's rights, both by the
direct involvement of the police and through the state's
failure to protect the rights of bonded labourers. It rarely
prosecutes or punishes employers who hold workers in
servitude, and workers who contest their exploitation are
often imprisoned under false charges.
14. It is the duty
of the government of Pakistan to comply with its own
national laws as well as with international human rights and
labour laws outlawing bonded labour, to ensure that all
workers are allowed to organize and be represented by
unions, and to prosecute to the full extent of the law,
employers who have held workers in bonded labour and those
who have physically or sexually abused bonded
labourers.
15. The situation calls for urgent government
actions to implement the labour laws in letter and spirit
and comply with international conventions safeguarding
rights of the workers. An overhaul of the functioning and
administering of the criminal justice delivery systems in
Pakistan is clearly the only way forward, in order to
grapple with this menace – slavery and bonded
labour.
16. Thereby, we call upon the United Nation Human
Rights Council to make necessary interventions with the
government of Pakistan, to work together towards ending
slavery and bonded labour in Pakistan as a matter of
priority. To recommend for the full implementation and
enforcement of Pakistan's international obligations to end
slavery and slavery like practices and to begin to address
issues of law enforcement and the lack of rule of law - in
order to effectively eradicate slavery in all its forms and
to protect the rights of all, especially the most vulnerable
groups in
Pakistan.
ENDS