Updated On: 28 December, 2023 06:45 AM IST | Mumbai | Diwakar Sharma
Their kids, too, were held captive, preventing them from going to school; their health has also been affected, according to activists

Bonded labourers working at the brick kiln in Bhiwandi. Pic/Hanif Patel
Tribal activists have rescued a total of 11 bonded labourers, including nine women, along with their dozen minor children, from a brick kiln in Chimbipada, Bhiwandi. All of them were living in deplorable conditions in their huts. These victims belong to primitive tribes from various talukas in Thane and Palghar districts. Some of these labourers had been enslaved at the brick kiln for the past 10 years without receiving any daily wages, while others were paid R600 a week for working 10 to 12 hours a day at Siddhik Hussain Shaikh’s heavily polluted brick kiln factory.
Tribal leader Vivek Pandit with the bonded labourers and their children. Pic/Hanif Patel