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How one Indian couple has helped thousands of sugarcane cutters

At home in the congested town of Beed, Ashok Tangade flips through the old case files of sugarcane cutters whom he and his wife, Manisha Tokle, helped rescue from bonded labor.  

India is one of the world’s largest sugar exporters, with more than a million sugarcane cutters in Maharashtra state alone. Local reports highlight rampant issues of child labor, sexual violence, and debt bondage. Many sugarcane cutters in Beed are migrant workers, lured to the fields with the promise of higher wages and better working conditions. Once on-site, they can be trapped in predatory loans, creating a vicious cycle of bonded labor that can span generations if left unchecked.

Why We Wrote This

Fighting modern slavery takes courage. One couple is using every tool available – including education – to combat bonded labor in India’s mammoth sugar industry.

Lawyer Sanjoy Ghose describes this as “the worst form of modern slavery,” and one explicitly outlawed under India’s 1976 Bonded Labour Systems (Abolition) Act. For decades, Mr. Tangade and Ms. Tokle have been working closely with sugarcane cutters across Maharashtra, partnering with police to extract laborers from abusive farms, and also educating them about their rights and how to fight for their own freedom.

“Since these laborers were mostly illiterate … they would assume they were legally bound by the bond,” says Mr. Tangade. “Now the workers realize that they too are entitled to their rights, and that they cannot be held hostage by anyone.”

In the early 1990s, Masu Avadh was chopping sugarcane in India’s Maharashtra state, trying to work off the debt his grandfather and father had both died trying to repay. Feeling ill, Mr. Avadh left the farm without informing the owner to buy medicine. When he returned, he was beaten. 

That’s when a young couple intervened.

“When we learnt Avadh … was working to repay the loan his grandfather had taken, we informed the police,” says Ashok Tangade, flipping through the old case files of sugarcane cutters he and his wife, Manisha Tokle, helped rescue from bonded labor.  At their home in the small and congested town of Beed, the now middle-aged duo recalls how Mr. Avadh was freed not only from the farm owner’s clutches, but also from the familial debt. 

Why We Wrote This

Fighting modern slavery takes courage. One couple is using every tool available – including education – to combat bonded labor in India’s mammoth sugar industry.

Mr. Avadh is one of thousands of bonded laborers assisted by Mr. Tangade and Ms. Tokle, but many more remain in bondage – a practice illegal in India since the late 1970s. 

About 50 million people work in India’s sugar fields, cutting cane for major international companies. There’s a paucity of precise data on bonded labor in sugar cane production specifically, but a 2019 study by the United Nations Development Programme and the Coca-Cola Company notes that most of India’s bonded laborers work in agriculture, and anecdotal evidence shows India’s sugar industry marred by exploitation and debt bondage. For the past three decades, Mr. Tangade and Ms. Tokle have been working closely with sugarcane cutters across Maharashtra, helping extract laborers from abusive farms, and also educating them about their rights and how to fight for their own freedom.

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