(lifted
from The Kathmandu Post, an English national daily)
It is
unfortunate that bonded labourers (Kamaiyas) who were liberated about
three months ago from the exploitation of landlords should find themselves
in so precarious a position. They have had to adopt arious
means for
their survival. The main reason for this is that the government has done
nothing about its pledge to resettle them. The Kamaiyas who are skilled
only in agriculture have been left with no other choice but to take up
low-paying menial jobs or to get into the sex trade. It is a fact that the
plight of these liberated bonded labourers has gone from bad to worse.
Such an estranged profession not only hurts their dignity but also raises
questions regarding their future resettlement. Obviously, Kamaiya girls
and women have been compelled to involve themselves in sex trade due to
lack of employment opportunities as well as due to difficulties in coping
with their liberated life in the absence of proper economic and
rehabilitative packages for them.
Three
months ago, the government and some social organisations liberated over
eighty five thousand Kamaiyas in the country's five western districts.
Ironically, the government claimed it was a revolutionary step to reform
the existing social system. Since July, the government has neither been
able to resettle them nor has it come up with substantial measures for
their rehabilitation. This has not only affected their daily life but also
forced them to wander without jobs and shelter. This apart, the I/NGOs
which drove the government to pass the legislation against the practice of
bonded labourers have also failed to resettle Kamaiyas due to absence of
resources.
A week
after their liberation, the government made an appeal to Kamaiyas to
cooperate with their former landlords and urged them to return to work.
The government did this because it realised its state of "unpreparedness"
for their rehabilitation. Had there been some arrangements to provide land
or jobs to landless bonded labourers, such an appeal would not have come.
This apart, the emancipation fund too did not draw any international
attention due to lack of specific resettlement programmes. But there are a
few questions. Does the government have any right to give such counselling?
If not, then why did the government liberate them without having proper
measures for their resettlement in place? The constitution of 1990 clearly
prohibits any kind of slavery or serfdom. Under such provisions, the
government does not have any right to send Kamaiyas back to their former
landlords.
The
government, opposition parties and I/NGOs must realize that they have
turned the life of Kamaiyas from bad to worse. For example, their
involvement in sex trade will generate more social problems than can be
solved with government or I/NGO intervention. Therefore, the government
must treat the Kamaiya question as a matter deserving great urgency.