Bonded labour and the feudal mindset.

THE recent Barkhan incident involving murder and kidnapping of women and children has been a stark reminder to the gross scope, magnitude and dimension of forced labour practices in Pakistan. There are numerous cases of similar nature even though they generally remain unreported.

There are horrendous stories of exploitation of the poor victims by influential landlords and criminal gangs. Strong political linkages and the 'right' connections allow the resourceful to continue to engage in such activities, particularly in Balochistan and Sindh, exploiting the poor and the vulnerable.

Pakistan, one of the source countries for human trafficking, ranks 8th among 167 countries in terms of prevalence of modern slavery and exploitation of bonded and forced labour. There were 32,022 cases of bonded, forced and child labour registered in 2020, and 21,253 in 2021, whereas many cases are never reported.

A dated estimate of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) was that 1.8 million people work as bonded labour in Pakistan, whereas the estimate of another source is of 3.18 million living under the conditions of slavery.

These men, women and children work across the country in informal sectors of agriculture, textiles, mining, hotels and restaurants, brick-kilns, and fisheries, as well as in the illegal domains of beggary, drug trafficking and flesh trade.

A soaring rate of unemployment, increasing cost of living, poverty, illiteracy and the fast worsening economic conditions together pose a real challenge to any effort that is meant to curb internal trafficking.

It is estimated that there are 1.5 million children...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT