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In India, shackled workers rescued after being forced to dig wells for 12 hours a day without pay

  • Case has shone new light on the long-outlawed practice of bonded labour, in which debtors are forced to work to pay back borrowed cash while interest keeps mounting
  • About a dozen workers were forced to dig a well for 12 hours a day without any wages a government rights body said

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A labourer transports raw material used for moulding brick on the outskirts of Jalandhar in India’s Punjab state. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse
About a dozen shackled workers in India were rescued from “torture” in a chain gang digging wells for 12 hours a day without wages, a government rights body said on Monday.

The case has shone new light on the long-outlawed practice of bonded labour, dubbed “debt slavery” by rights campaigners, in which debtors are forced to work to pay back borrowed cash while interest keeps mounting.

The reports of the 11 labourers from Maharashtra state emerged after one slipped his chains, told the Maharashtra police about the use of “torture” and brought them to free the others on June 17, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) said.

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“They were forced to work for 12 hours a day without any wages to dig a well,” NHRC said in a statement.

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It also said they were chained to stop them from escaping, were fed once a day and forced to defecate where they worked.

Police had arrested four people but the NHRC said more had to be done than the “mere rescue by the police and arrest of some of the accused”.

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The NHRC said the case “grossly violated” the 1976 abolition of the bonded labour system.

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