Aurangabad: Jalgaon police traced and saved eight people (each four members of two families) from the workforce bound at the facilities in Daund in Pune and sugar factories in Karnataka almost eight days after the High Court in Aurangabad directing notice to the police responded to two petitions Habeas Corpus.
The two applicants have moved a high court on the grounds that their requests repeatedly to the police to track the ‘missing’ relatives they have failed to arouse any response.
Harsind Bhil (38) from Salsingi Village in Bodwad Tehsil from the Jalgaon district filed one of these petitions, while others were submitted by Arvind Tore (27) from Sonati and Prakash Bhil Village (36) from Salsingan (36) from Salsingi (36).
The petition will mature for the next hearing on January 5 before the jade jade bench and more sandipkumar justice.
In addition to seeking direction to the police and district authorities to save their relatives, the applicants also seek actions against those responsible for encouraging victims into bound workers.
The police saved Harsind Maltabai’s sister (36), her husband Jangalu (38) and their children Rahit (10) and Mangal (8), all residents of Bhil Wada in Salsingi, from the brick kiln in Daund in Daund.
Lawyer Jitendra Patil, representing Harsind, has submitted in the presence of a court that in October labor contractors have taken a family of four with the pretext involving them in the work of sugarcane cutters and then selling it to the owner of brick burning in Daund.
He handed over that Harsind knew this when his sister managed to call him, but the police and the district government did not act on their requests.
On December 17, Harsind received the second call from his sister reported that her husband was brutally embraced.
In the second case, Tore Sangita sister (29), her husband Arun Syawn (32) and their children Amar (15), Vidya (12) and Tai (9), besides that Prakash’s brother, his wife Sunitabai (22 ) And their daughter Didi (two) and six-month pinki were illegally detained at a sugar factory in Karnataka.
“Arun, Sanganya, Amar, Vidya and Tai managed to escape from the factory and walk five days to reach Pune and then to their village.
The remaining four were saved from Karnataka by the police team,” said Patil.
“For us, the petition does not end with the rescue of the unfortunate tribes, which is forced into a bound workforce.
On the next hearing date, before the HC we will highlight the exploitation of these poor people, the same livestock sold by labor contractors, And will look for actions against all those responsible, “Patil said.