| 2 lakh Odisha workers suffer in hellish Andhra kilns by RailXpert on 27 January, 2013 - 03:00 PM | ||
|---|---|---|
RailXpert | 2 lakh Odisha workers suffer in hellish Andhra kilns on 27 January, 2013 - 03:00 PM | |
KOLKATA: They are loaded onto trains like goats, wide-eyed and scared. Few know where they are being herded to or where the trains - the Korba-VSKP Link Express and the Durg-VSKP Passenger - are going. They are pushed into unreserved compartments, one stacked above the other like sacks of rice. Some die without food or water; others from sheer heat. But no one cares. It's modern-day slavery at its worst.Every year in November, brick kiln workers with hunger gnawing inside them migrate from Odisha to Andhra Pradesh to escape abject poverty. This 'distress migration', which happens during the lean agricultural months, soon descends to a hellish existence as these workers have 18-hour work days, regular assaults and inhuman beatings."Some seem to have lost their minds in the process," says Subhadeep Kumar, a University of Hyderabad (UoH) student. "I don't think they were that way when they were recruited."Sudhir Katiyar, project director of Prayas Centre for Labor Research and Action (PCLRA), says, "There are at least 2,00,000 Odisha brick kiln workers in Andhra. They are a perfect example of slavery in modern times."These workers migrate from Balangir, Koraput, Kalahandi, Kandhamal and Bargarh districts of west Odisha. "Government schemes are not implemented properly here," says Trilochan Punji, president of Zindabad Sangathan which led to the formation of a union in Balangir. "NREGS mein ghotala hai (It's a scam). They don't get paid for any work." | ||