Dear Friends;

This story is from the Guardian UK (8 April, 2012)


-bhuban


The Delhi child servant scandal that has outraged India


Plight of 13-year-old locked in house while employers went on holiday sparks 
revulsion



Gethin Chamberlain

guardian.co.uk, Saturday 7 April 2012 20.12 BST
Article histor





Dr Sanjay Verma, centre, and Dr Sumita Verma, right, are arrested at their home 
in Dwarka, near Delhi, on 4 April 2012. Photograph: Hindustan Times/Getty Images

It was the 13-year-old maid's desperate cries for help that finally alerted 
neighbours to her plight. She was standing, sobbing, on the balcony of the 
upmarket Delhi apartment. Her employers had locked her in, she said, and gone 
on holiday. Finally rescued by a firefighter, she told a tale that prompted a 
widespread display of national revulsion.
Her employers – middle-class doctors Sanjay and Sumita Verma – had "bought" her 
from an agency, which had in turn bought her from her uncle. She was hungry, 
she said, because they barely fed her. She received no pay and was regularly 
beaten. Their latest act of cruelty had been to lock her in and go on holiday 
to Thailand.
The couple claim that they thought the girl was 18 and deny mistreating her, 
but they were roundly vilified and have been refused bail. In court the couple 
were accused of "subjecting the victim to a treatment which can be best 
described as torture".
Perhaps the most puzzling aspect of the story is why it has caused such fury in 
a country where, after all, the sight of a youthful servant rarely raises a 
flicker of curiosity. Delhi's thriving middle class would crumble without its 
army of domestic servants, whose presence enables couples to go out to work and 
continue to boost an economy projected to be the largest in the world by 2050.
The most liberal members of that society think nothing of employing a maid, a 
driver, a sweeper, a cook, a gardener and a couple of house boys who sleep on 
the roof, or in tiny shared rooms.
The International Labour Organisation estimates that there are at least four 
million domestic servants in India, including about 100,000 children working in 
and around Delhi. While it has been illegal to employ anyone under the age of 
14 since 2006, that has done little to hinder the placement agencies which 
routinely hire out trafficked children.
A good maid might earn 3,500 rupees (£43) a month, if she is very lucky, or 
about half the legal minimum wage for an unskilled worker in Delhi. The less 
fortunate are bought from brokers and kept as unpaid skivvies – simply fed and 
given somewhere to sleep.
A company called Domestic Help in India is one of thousands of agencies 
supplying staff. Based in Gurgaon, near Delhi, the company charges employers 
16,000 rupees to arrange the hire of a maid for 11 months. Its website is 
packed with adverts for staff, who can be selected on the basis of age (15 and 
upwards), religion and gender. Gurpreet, a maid/cook, has two years' experience 
and costs 3,000 rupees a month. Harjett, who has one year's experience, is 
available to anyone in Delhi for just 2,000 rupees a month. Those less 
comfortable with the way the system operates often try to assuage their 
feelings of guilt by hiring staff at above the going rate.
However, writing on an expatriate website that offers advice to foreigners 
moving to India, Shawn Runacres, managing director of the Gurgaon-based 
Domesteq staff placement agency, says there should be no need to feel awkward 
if staff are treated well. "Throw out the guilt – remember you are providing 
much-needed employment at fair rates and excellent working conditions," she 
says. "The very thought of no longer having to make beds, cook, dust, wash 
dishes and do laundry sounds like heaven and, for those with children, if you 
add to all these things the possibility of affordable, on-tap childcare, it 
becomes irresistible." Speaking on Friday, she said she was convinced that the 
market for domestic staff would continue to grow as India's economy expanded, 
not least because of the challenges posed by living in India. "There are many 
more challenges to your daily life," she said. She doubts that it would be 
possible to live without staff. "You would spend your entire time just trying 
to keep yourself fed and your home in some semblance of shape. You can't just 
get water from the tap; you have to clean your water. You can't just eat fruit 
off the tree or out of the market. Is it a luxury? No, not in India. It is 
absolutely a staple of life." Runacres's agency – which does not employ 
children and promises fair wages and dignity of labour – pays well above the 
average. Others are less scrupulous.
Bhuwan Ribhu, national secretary of the Bachpan Bachao Andolan (Save the 
Childhood Movement), said child labour was now common in the cities, 
particularly involving girls aged 12 to 18, while boys aged 10 and upwards are 
more common in the countryside. "India cannot and must not grow at the cost of 
millions of childhoods," he said.
Many children are trafficked from poor states such as Bihar and West Bengal 
through the thousands of illegal agencies operating in the cities. Last year 
the movement raided a placement agency to rescue six girls and uncovered 
evidence of 400 girls who had been trafficked.
Ribhu says people cannot resist a cheap deal. "Well educated or not, people try 
to maximise their profits by employing kids. They do not pay proper wages. The 
probability of children leaving employment whenever they want is very low, and 
they may be exploited, beaten and made to work long hours," he said.
While many people in India may have been appalled by the Delhi case, he said, 
there were thousands of others who continued to employ children. "Children work 
because they are the cheapest form of labour, and in these situations they are 
victims of slavery. They are abused, not only economically but physically and 
sexually, as the exploiters also have little fear of law enforcement," he said.
Patricia Lone of Unicef says domestic labour is one of the most dangerous forms 
of child labour because of the potential for abuse, particularly for girls. "It 
is a huge problem in most countries in south Asia because of the levels of 
poverty."
Sometimes it is parents unable to support their children who pack them off to 
work; other times it is the children themselves who seek to pay their own way, 
she says. "But it is related to poverty, which forces parents and children to 
put themselves at risk."
The outcry over the Delhi maid was encouraging, said Ribhu, in that it opened 
people's eyes to the reality of what is going on. But he is not getting too 
excited about the arrests. They were, he said, an anomaly in a country where 
many people simply do not understand that using children as servants is 
wrong."Recently, I was in a mall where I saw a couple with a 10- or 11-year-old 
girl taking care of their baby while they were eating. When I confronted them, 
the lady replied that: 'She is in such a good condition here – she would starve 
to death in her village. Who will go feed her there? And she has even been 
taught English'," he said. "When I asked her if she realised that she was 
committing a crime, she replied that the girl was being kept just like her own 
daughter and she is 'even brought to the mall … can anyone in her village even 
dream of such a luxury, of going to the mall?' "I explained as nicely as 
possible to her husband that if I were to call the police to their house, they 
would be arrested, and if the girl was 'like their daughter', why was she not 
eating with them at the same table? And he had no answer."





_______________________________________________
assam mailing list
[email protected]
http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org

Reply via email to