SLAVERY FROM SPACE

Brick by brick: satellite images could identify slave labour in India

india-bonded-labour-reuters Despite a 1976 ban on bonded labour, the practice remains widespread in northern India | Reuters (File photo)

Researchers in England are hoping to help root out modern day slavery in northern India by using detailed satellite imagery to locate brick kilns―sites that are notorious for using millions of slaves, including children.

A team of geospatial experts at the University of Nottingham use Google Maps and dozens of volunteers to identify potential sites of exploitation and report them to authorities.

“The key thing at the moment is to get those statistics right and to get the locations of the brick kilns sorted,” said Dr Doreen Boyd, a co-researcher on the 'Slavery from Space' project.

“There are certainly activists on the ground that will help us in terms of getting the statistics and the locations of these brick kilns to (government) officials.”

Anti-slavery activists said the project could be useful in identifying remote kilns or mines that would otherwise escape public or official scrutiny.

“But there are other, more pressing challenges like tackling problematic practices including withheld wages, lack of transparent accounting,... no enforcement of existing labour laws,” said Jakub Sobik, spokesman at Anti-Slavery, a London-based NGO.

Millions of people in India are believed to be living in slavery. Despite a 1976 ban on bonded labour, the practice remains widespread at brick kilns, rice mills, and brothels, among others.

The majority of victims belong to low-income families or marginalised castes like the dalits or 'untouchables'.

Nearly 70 per cent of brick kiln workers in South Asia are estimated to be working in bonded and forced labour, according to a 2016 report by the International Labour Organisation. About a fifth of those are under age.

The project relies on 'citizen science' or 'crowdsourcing'―a process where volunteers sift through thousands of satellite images to identify possible locations of kilns. Each image is shown to multiple volunteers who mark kilns independently.

The team is currently focused on an area of 2,600 square km in the desert state of Rajasthan―teeming with brick-making sites―and plans to scale up the project in the coming years.

Researchers are now in talks with satellite companies to get access to more detailed images, rather than having to rely on publicly available Google Maps.

The project is one of several anti-slavery initiatives run by the university, which include research on slave labour-free supply chains and human trafficking.

 

Sourced from Reuters

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