Janakpurdham, April 6: When victims of loan sharking in the Madhesh Province are presently in the Federal Capital Kathmandu, seeking justice, the Harawa-Charawa (agricultural bonded laborers) community here are all set to embark on a journey towards the Province capital Janakpur for their rights.
National Harawa Charawa Rights Forum central chair Dashanlal Mandal said they were preparing to begin a Janakpur visit in a bid to create a pressure among the stakeholders concerned for the community rehabilitation of freed Harawa-Charawa people. Their journey is named the ‘Adhikar Yatra’ (rights journey).
The Harawa-Charawa community from all eight districts in the Province will be gathering in Janakpur for their rights, and the journey will take place from April 8-12 with the theme of “Just rehabilitation of Harawa-Charawa is our concern; land, education, health, employment and social securities are our rights.”
The government on July 18, 2022 declared the liberation of Harawa- Charawa and the move was welcomed as the landmark announcement, but no programmes of rehabilitation has been brought yet. “We are yet to feel our liberation from the bonded labor,” said Mandal, adding that their life has been more challenging as they have been displaced from their ancestral occupation after being freed from the bonded labour.
“If the Province Government fails to come up with substantive promises, Kathmandu will be our next destination for the movement,” he said.
The issue of Harawa-Charawa is the matter of national concern specific to the Madesh and the movement will focus Janakpur first as we want the Province government to take ownership of our problems, and to come up with a substantive approach to address them, according to Rastriya Dalit Network ( RDN) central Chair Ganesh Bishwokarma.
As said by RDC executive director Hukum Sarki, around 10,000 people from the Harawa-Charawa community will be joining the gathering in Janakpur. As per the schedule, the journey will start from Rajbiraj of Saptari and Birgunj of Parsa and end up in Janakpur. A discussion with local representatives will be held on the way to Janaknpur, it has been said.
A mass meeting is scheduled to take place in Janakpur on April 11.
According to rights activists, the number of Harawa-Charawa population in Madesh is around 60,000. The Harawa-Charawa 2019 study based in Dhanshua showed around 90 percent of them were forced to live as the bonded labourers for taking loans for medical treatment for themselves and their families, and over 72 percent were prevented from seeking work opportunities outside.
The same study revealed that the private agricultural production by 27 percent of Harawa-Charawa is sufficient for just three months, 88 percent were living in thatched huts, 24 percent in huts built on public land and 27 in block houses.