Thousands face death, alcoholism and rising crime while eking out a dangerous livelihood in eastern state of Jharkhand.
Every morning at the crack of dawn,
13-year-old Sagar Kujur joins many others of his age and even younger to
trudge towards the coal pits of Ramgarh in Jharkhand, a state in
eastern India.
Armed with shovels and cane baskets,
they tip-toe over the jagged surface, settle down in a corner and start
digging a hole through rocks of solid coal. A few back-breaking hours
later, their baskets fill up with pieces of coal that had been chipped
away, and they hurry to the nearest market to sell their day’s treasure.
Children like Kujur, blackened with coal
dust, serve as daily reminders to the dark secrets of the 15,000-odd
coal mines in the state.
Jharkhand is mineral-rich, but a
majority of its people is dirt poor. As in the rest of India where,
according to UNICEF, some 28 million children work to supplement their
families’ meagre income, 400,000 children aged between five and 14 work
in Jharkhand. Given the proximity to mines, many children work in them.
It is dangerous to work in the mines,
particularly those that are underground where fatal cave-ins are
frequently reported. But their penury leaves the children with few
choices. “I know there is danger in this work, but at the end of the
day, it is the money that matters,” Kujur said.
Officially, the mines are leased to
state-owned companies such as the Central Coalfield Limited (CCL),
Bharat Cooking Coal Limited (BCCL) and Eastern Coalfield Limited (ECL).
Illegal mining
However, people venture into these mines
to extract coal illegally. At times, they burrow into mines that have
been abandoned, or poach into mines that are operational but not
properly policed.
With thousands of mines and a large area
to cover, it is often impossible for the companies to monitor every
mine, allowing an illegal mining industry to flourish.
I used to study, but then who will earn
for my family? There is no other option. All my family members have to
work together all day so that we don’t starve.
Rakesh Kumar, 12, miner
Government figures also point to the
deep-rooted scourge of illegal mining. According to the ministry of
coal, 583 cases of illegal mining were reported in the state between
2006 and 2010. Strangely, however, not a single person was arrested for
the trade. In the four years up to September 2009, 21,702 tonnes of
illegally mined coal were seized by officials.
According to a report published by the
Jamshedpur-based Xavier Labour Relation Institute in 2008, there are
some 195 illegal mining sites under CCL’s purview, 49 under BCCL and 203
under ECL.
State-owned coal companies blamed the
government for failing to curb illegal mining. “Inadequate
infrastructure of law enforcement agencies offers scope for illegal
extraction of coal from the area. We are working according to the Mines
and Minerals Act, but it is not possible on our part to curb illegal
mining from the area,” said R R Prasad, the public relations officer of
BCCL.
Similarly, R B Sharma, the general
manager of CCL in Ramgarh, said that although he is well-aware of the
situation, “it’s a vast area and fencing the entire area is not
possible. The state government never enforced sufficient force to
monitor the area”.
ECL officials could not be reached for comment.
‘There is no other option’
Despite the 1952 Indian Mines Act that
stipulates that no one under the age of 18 can be employed in the mines,
many children do so anyway.
Rules mean little to the children who
claw coal from the guts of the earth for a living. “I used to study, but
then who will earn for my family? There is no other option. All my
family members have to work together all day so that we don’t starve
from hunger,” says Rakesh Kumar, 12, another child miner. “On a normal
day, we earn 200 rupees ($3.60) by going into these mines.”
Their future looks as bleak as the dark
mines they are forced to work in. Schools are scarce in the region, and
education is often seen to be a luxury.
“We know that we are gambling with our
lives, and our children’s lives, every day – but with no poverty
alleviation projects or alternate forms of employment reaching this part
of the state, we are forced to mine coal for our livelihood,” said
Shanti Tete, a woman working in the mines.
Death plays “hide and seek” with the
miners each day, says 34-year-old Komal Devi. Each year, the mines in
this area kill around 20 workers including six or seven children,
pointed out Sanjit Kumar of the non-governmental organisation SRIJAN.
Illegal mining also bleeds the
government of revenue. “Because of unauthorised mining, coal companies
bear a loss of $20m per year, and [the] state government suffers a loss
of $6.2m every year,” says Radhe Ramen, the deputy director of the
mining department.
Social activists also talk of the high
toll the illegal trade exacts on children, ranging from alcoholism to
rising juvenile crime.
The government, however, has failed to
curb the illegal trade and all its attendant evils. “We tried to enroll
people in the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act
work, but people do not want to get involved as they do not see enough
money,” explains Santhosh Satpathy of Jharkhand’s rural development
department.
As many as “10,000 families might be
earning their livelihood by ‘rat-hole’ mining in the area”, he said. “As
the area has a history of mining – both legal and illicit – one
solution may be to legalise the unlawful mining, and provide workers
with sufficient safety training.”
For children like Kujur, though, the
debate is of little consequence. What matters is going out every day to
chip the coal and cart them to the market for some money. It’s no
child’s play, but many of Jharkhand’s children are left without any
choice.
PUNCH
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