End human trafficking in Assam
As the biggest single shareholder, if Tata Global Beverages commits to help improve the working conditions of the employees of Amalgamated Plantations, they could play a much needed leading role in ending slavery in Assam, India.
Tell Tata Global Beverages to help prevent the trafficking of young girls working on their tea plantations by taking these three essential steps:
1.Publish the Tata Global Beverages Code of Conduct. Make public a code of conduct which ensures zero tolerance for modern slavery and includes measures for effective remediation when modern slavery is found.
2.Ensure that plantation workers are paid a full cash living wage and are able to opt out of investment schemes, across all plantations. Pay should be backdated accordingly.
3.Establish an independent grievance mechanism to enable workers to report violation of their rights, both individually and collectively, as verification that the code is being implemented.
By now, you’ve probably seen the exposé in The Guardian on what is being called the “Tea Maid Trade.” Men and women operating as “recruiters” prey on young girls living on tea plantations in Assam, India. Thousands of girls have reportedly ended up trapped as domestic slaves in middle class homes in Delhi.1
So how do these girls become trapped? The short answer is that workers in Assam are trapped in a unique situation of terrible poverty making them vulnerable to the lure of human traffickers.2
The long answer looks like this:
1.Tata Global Beverages (owner of Tetley Tea) is the biggest shareholder of a company called Amalgamated Plantations which manages tea plantations in Assam, India.
2.Several years ago, a program was initiated that aimed to make tea plantation workers part owners in Amalgamated Plantations. In exchange for a portion of their already small wages, they would get shares in the company. Sounds good, right? Sadly, scores of workers report they were coerced to buy shares in Amalgamated Plantations and remain confused about the details.3
3.Reports indicate that workers are paid 94 rupees ($1.54 USD) a day, a little over half the legal wage for an unskilled worker in Assam. But there is a price for keeping wages so low, and it is paid by the workers who cannot afford to keep their daughters. When the traffickers come knocking, offering to take the girls away, promising good wages and an exciting new life, they find it hard to say no.4
4.Because of the poverty in Assam, trafficking girls is an attractive business for locals. Investigative reports indicate that people in Delhi have bought girls for as little as 4,000 Rupees (or $65 USD).5
Unfortunately, the problem of human trafficking in Assam is not new. But right now we do have a window of opportunity to act and call for change. Due to growing global media coverage, Tata is feeling the heat. Tata has announced that it has commissioned an audit on the living and working conditions in the APPL tea plantations. This is a good first step, but we’re asking Tata to do more.
Note: We want to be really clear — we are not accusing Tata Global Beverages of trafficking girls from Assam to be held in situations of modern slavery. We are, however, concerned that Tata Global Beverages is engaged in a labour scheme via Amalgamated Plantations in Assam that is fuelling unique forms of vulnerability to modern slavery. Of all the possible players, Tata Global Beverages has the power to do the most good in this situation and that is why we are calling on them to engage.
Sources
1.
http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2014/mar/02/tea-workers-sold-into-slavery ↩
2.
http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/video/2014/mar/01/tetley-tea-maids-real-price-cup-tea-video ↩
3.
http://web.law.columbia.edu/human-rights-institute/initiatives/global-economy/tea-plantations/more-things-change ↩
4.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/mar/01/india-tea-firms-urged-tackle-slave-traffic-plantations ↩
5.
http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2014/mar/02/tea-workers-sold-into-slavery ↩
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