Monday, October 29, 2007

I was a child worker!!

A British journalist visited a garment factory in New Delhi where kids as young as 10 were putting Gap labels on clothing.

Gap says it had not contracted with that factory and that a Gap contractor had subcontracted the work without the company's approval.

Gap, based in San Francisco, is generally viewed as a leader in manufacturing clothes that were made in factories with good working condition. It has a team of inspectors who make surprise visits to subcontractors' factories around the world. If it supposedly got snookered, you can only imagine how widespread the problem is at factories cranking out goods for smaller manufacturers.

Now don't get me wrong--all kids, everywhere are entitled to education and to be safe. But in many countries, it's only feasible for a host of reasons for families to educate their kids through grammar school or middle school. Families in India, China, Vietnam, Chile are struggling to even survive. Parents there face hard choices everyday. So is it realistic that Westerners expect all kids to be in school and out of the factories until they're 17?

I wonder if we Westerners romanticize childhood now that we can afford to as a developed country. When we first came to the U.S. my parents worked in garment shops that were owned by friends and relatives. They brought work home and I remember staying up late to help them cut thread and fix stitches. I'm sure some laws were being broken technically, but my parents really needed that money to feed us--and that meant me helping them. And that was right here in California.




India Activists Decry Gap Child Labor

By MATTHEW ROSENBERG – 3 hours ago

NEW DELHI (AP) — With Gap Inc. under fire for selling clothes made by children in India, activists and police raided a sweatshop in New Delhi where 14 boys were embroidering women's garments Monday, illustrating the widespread problem of child labor in the South Asian country.

The children were as young as 10, came from a poor farming district on the other side of the country, and said they had never been given promised wages for working up to 15 hours a day embroidering sequins onto the flowing saris worn by Indian women.

The working and living conditions in the sweatshop just blocks from where the Gap clothes were being made were grim — the boys were packed into a filthy room, sleeping on the same floor where they sewed all day.

"I don't want my money anymore. Now I want to go home," said a thin 15-year-old boy who gave his name only as Hatiquallah.

Speaking at a nearby police station after the raid, Hatiquallah said he had been brought to New Delhi three years ago by a man who promised him work — and money. He never told his parents he was leaving.

"I was waiting for my wages," he replied when asked why he stayed. "I don't want them now."

India's transformation in the past decade into an emerging global economic power has done little to alleviate the country's widespread poverty — and the problems that go along with it, such as child labor.

The government estimates that 13 million children work here, many of them in hazardous industries, such as glass making, where such labor has long been banned. Rights activists place the number as high as 60 million — one estimate has 20 percent of India's economy dependent on kids under the age of 14.

The scope of the problem was clear Monday in the warren of narrow and dark alleys in New Delhi's Shahpur Jat neighborhood, where the sari sweatshop was found just a few houses down from the now-shuttered operation that made Gap clothes.

"Every other house is like this — there are children working in small garment units," said a police officer involved in the raid, Birpal Singh.

Police said they believed the saris were for sale within India.

But the widespread use of child labor in India and the discovery that kids were making clothes for the Gap, which has 90 full-time inspectors who travel around the world, raises questions for India's garment exporting industry, a $10 billion a year business that grew by more than 20 percent last year.

Some of the biggest names in retailing make clothes in India, from Ralph Lauren to J.C. Penny. They all say that oversight of contractors is strict, but child's rights activists disagree.

"International companies hire subcontractors and then forget about it. There is no monitoring at all," said Bhuwan Ribhu, a lawyer who works with Bachpan Bachao Andolan, or the Save Childhood Movement.

For the kids themselves, the issue is not as clear cut as many outside India would imagine — many poor children are expected to work.

Sanjeev, an 11-year-old rescued Monday from the sweatshop, said his parents had sent him off to work in New Delhi two years ago. He had not heard from or seen them since, and was worried they would be upset with him for not sending any money home. "But I never got my wages," he said.

Monday's raid came a day after Britain's Observer newspaper reported that children as young as 10 were found sewing clothes for the Gap in a New Delhi factory. It quoted the children as saying they had been sold to the sweatshop by their impoverished families and were not paid.

Gap responded quickly, saying the factory was being run by a subcontractor who was hired in violation of Gap's policies, and none of the products made there will be sold in its stores.

Indian officials, in contrast, offered no comment on the Observer report.

But child's rights activists said it was just a small part of a bigger problem, as evidenced by Monday's raid.

"The biggest responsibility here lies with the Indian government — they don't develop a way of monitoring" factories, said Ribhu, the lawyer.

"Where the Gap is concerned, at least they've taken a good pro-active stand against the subcontractors," he added.

Ribhu's group organized Monday's raid, finding the sweatshop and tipping off police, who planned to question the boys and then hand them over to child welfare authorities.

Ribhu said he would push authorities to return the children to their families in eastern India.

Associated Press reporter Muneeza Naqvi contributed to this story.

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