Home » India, the “sugar sacrifice”: female workers without a womb to be able to cope with grueling shifts

India, the “sugar sacrifice”: female workers without a womb to be able to cope with grueling shifts

by admin
India, the “sugar sacrifice”: female workers without a womb to be able to cope with grueling shifts

In India, in the Beed district, the main sugar cane production area, 36% of agricultural workers are without uterus after having undergone total ablation, often even at a young age, to find employment and be more productive . Documenting the ordeal of the Indians employed in the sugar cane fields is a reportage by the broadcaster France Télévisions broadcast tomorrow evening in the ‘Envoyé Spécial’ program.

Sugar cane is harvested every year for six months in the city of Beed, in Maharashtra (central-west), a business that employs over one million workers, half of whom are women. Generally they are recruited by ‘mukadam’, or agents paid by plantation owners to bring entire families to work in the fields, already from the age of 10. The working conditions are extremely harsh: wake up at 3 am, more than 10 hours of work in the scorching sun and only one day of rest a month. During the six months of the harvest they live in tents set up by the owners of the sugar factories, without running water or electricity. In the fields it is always the notorious ‘mukadam’ who control agricultural workers and their productivity.

They are always the ones who suggest to girls and women to proceed with a total hysterectomy, with ablation of the ovaries, to eliminate menstrual pain, problems related to childbirth, presenting the operation as trivial. The doctors in the region who perform the invasive operation argue that by doing so they avoid developing a tumor, in fact a much lower risk to a woman’s health than the consequences of a hysterectomy, especially if performed at a young age.

See also  [Notice]For customers from the European Economic Area (EEA) and the United Kingdom - Yahoo! JAPAN

“If they don’t remove the uterus it’s a problem for us, they’re less productive. And if they have cancer, they are no longer of any use “a recruiter, Jyotiram Andhale, told ‘Envoyé Spécial’, specifying that the cost of the surgery is their responsibility and that during hospitalization and convalescence they are not paid. mukadam yells at us if we don’t work hard enough. He beats us very hard, even when we’re sick. He yells at our husbands that we don’t work hard and that we have to pay back the salary, “a woman told reporters from France Te’le’visions while the husband is busy delivering freshly cut reeds to the factory.

The report entitled “Sugar sacrifices” collected the testimonies of female workers, of which more than one in three has been subjected to irreversible surgery, some as early as 20 years old. Hysterectomy causes very early menopause as it blocks the production of hormones and makes them sterile. At 30, those who performed the surgery seem to have 50, with a prematurely aged face and body, but on the other hand no more menstrual pains, no children, and above all greater productivity and a guaranteed job. They often have no choice but to give in to the pressures of the ‘mukadams’ to work and make ends meet with their family by paying the highest price on their bodies.

In the rest of India, as elsewhere in the world, this operation affects only 3% of women and in general is performed only on patients over 50 years of age. In addition to the damage, the insult: together with Brazil, India is the world‘s largest producer of sugar, but it is also one of the countries with the lowest per capita consumption, so domestic demand is much lower than supply. If all the excess sugar were sold on the Indian market, prices would collapse with serious damage to the entire supply chain. Thus the government pays huge subsidies to export millions of tons.

See also  Sensitive moment!The President of Indonesia's G20 Summit Meeting with Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang in Beijing may be embarrassing | Indonesian President | Visiting China | Xi Jinping | Li Keqiang | Widodo | Russia | Putin |

To remedy the chronic sugar glut – 28 million tons were produced in 2019, with an excess of about 5 million – the lobby of private and state producers united in the Indian Sugar Mills Association (ISMA) is trying to persuade Indians to eat more sugar with web campaigns and various incentives. Populous India is the largest consumer of sugar in the world overall, but on average each citizen uses 19 kilos per year compared to 23 in many other countries. The powerful producers exalt the properties of sugar and push us to “discover sweetness in our lives”, in spite of the bitter fate of women sacrificed in the fields of Maharashtra.

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More

Privacy & Cookies Policy