By Sushmita Ghosh
In situations of conflict, the beginnings of a compromise sometimes lie outside the conflict itself. Decades of political tension and suspicion
among the countries of the Subcontinent, for example, tensions aggravated
by the recent nuclear tests by India and Pakistan, are being set aside by
campaigners against one of the area's worst scourges: child labor.
This reality presents itself in the office of the South Asian Coalition
Against Child Servitude, an Indian nonprofit organization that has sparked
international consumer awareness and legislation to combat child labor:
Huge black and white photographs of child laborers from India, Pakistan,
Nepal, Bangladesh and other South Asian countries cover the office walls
children very much from the same hell, undivided by territorial hubris.
Kailash Satyarthi, the man who launched the coalition, provides common
ground for a region struggling to find one: All children on the
Subcontinent face the same risk; banning child labour in India would only
shift businesses that thrive on inexpensive labor to neighboring countries.
All these children are ours. We cannot shun them because we do not share
their nationality.