Germany Wants Indian Exports Free of Child Labour

New Delhi, Jan 12 – Germany, concerned over reports that products made using child labour in countries like India were entering its territory, has proposed a certification scheme that will satisfy customers of adequate social standards in imported merchandise.

‘A reliable form of certification is needed to ensure that no product sold in Germany is manufactured using child labour,’ said Karl-Josef Laumann, the minister of labour, health and social affairs from one of Germany’s most populated states.

‘There is a lot of concern in my country and I have discussed these issues with Indian policymakers,’ Laumann, who is from North-Rhine Westphalia, told reporters during a four-day visit to India that concluded Tuesday.

According to him, 20 percent of gravestones his state imported was from India.

‘This is a sensitive issue. People want to be sure that when they rest in peace, no child was involved in carving the gravestones. We need to ensure that our children go to school.’

The minister, nevertheless, was assured by an agency involved in promoting trade between the two countries that reports of use of child labour in India, especially in the marbles and stone industry, were exaggerated.

‘We have ourselves made several surprise visits to these places, including Jharkhand, Bihar and Rajasthan,’ said Dietrich Kebschull, chairman of the Indo-German Export Promotion Project, an agency recognised by the commerce ministry.

‘We can feel reassured that no case of child labour was found, especially in the large stones (business) that are exported to Germany,’ Kebschull, who has been promoting trade and economic relations between the two sides for over two decades, told IANS.

Laumann said he had discussed these issues with India’s Labour Minister Mallikarjun Kharge and was assured that there were several legislations in place to prevent child labour, as also certifications to assure prospective customers.

He also quoted Kharge as saying that India was opposed to linking social standards with trade, and observed: ‘It’s okay to have differences of opinion. I’m sure official agencies of both countries will work to prevent such situations.’

Laumann said Germany, facing the problem of an ageing population, was keen to employ skilled workers from India, which had the largest pool of young workforce.

‘We would certainly welcome migration of workers. But in a hi-tech society like ours, we will require skilled workers. For such workers you at least need primary education. In Germany, we are providing special vocational courses to train workers.’

Posted by Vamban on Jan 12, 2010 @ 2:11 PM Filed under Business, National, Top Stories. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

1 Comment for “Germany Wants Indian Exports Free of Child Labour”

  1. Emily Bild

    Open letter to Indo-German Export Promotion Project
    20 January 2010

    Dear Mr Kebschull,

    We are writing in response to an article which appeared on the website Vanbam.com on 12 January 2010. HAQ: Centre for Child Rights and Samata welcome efforts by the German government to ensure products made by child labour are not entering the country. However, we feel deeply concerned by statements that you have made regarding the presence of child labour in the stone industry in India, which we feel are highly inaccurate and misleading.

    Our organisations, with the support of Terre Des Hommes-Germany, are in the process of finalising a 12-month study on the impacts of mining on children across India. During the course of our field research, we have visited mine sites and mining communities in nine states of India, covering a total of 14 districts across the country. In the vast majority of these districts, we have seen large numbers of children working in the mines and quarries, carrying out a variety of hazardous tasks.

    In July and September 2009, we carried out research in Jodhpur district of Rajasthan, where children were found to be working in every single one of the stone quarries visited. Therefore we feel seriously concerned by your statement that ‘We can feel reassured that no case of child labour was found, especially in the large stones (business) that are exported to Germany’ and the fact that you have reassured the Minister for Labour that ‘reports of child labour in India, especially in the marbles and stone industry, were exaggerated’. Inaccurate statements such as these serve to undermine both efforts to tackle child labour in the mining sector in India and the good intentions of the German government in preventing the import of products made by child labour.

    The full findings of our study will be published in March 2010, and will be launched at a national consultation in New Delhi on 22nd March. We hope that you will read the study and would like to invite you or your Delhi-based colleagues to attend the report launch in order to strengthen your understanding of this important issue.

    We look forward to hearing from you soon.

    Yours Faithfully.

    Enakshi Ganguly Thukral Bhanumathi Kalluri

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