THE CHILD
Labour (Prohibition
and Regulation)
Act, 1986
No. 61 of 1986]
[23rd
December, 1986]
CONTENTS
Preliminary
1. Short title, extend and commencement.
2. Definitions.
Prohibition of employment of children in certain
occupations and processes
3. Prohibition of Employment of children in certain occupations and
processes.
4. Power to amend the Schedule
5. Child Labour Technical Advisory Committee
12. Display of notice
containing abstract of Section 3 and 14.
Miscellaneous
14. Penalties.
15. Modified application of certain laws in relation
to penalties.
16. Procedure relating to offences.
17. Appointment of inspectors.
19. Rules and Notifications to be laid before
Parliament or State Legislature.
20. Certain other provisions of law not barred.
21. Power to remove difficulties
23. Amendment of Act 11 of 1948.
24. Amendment of Act 69 of 1951.
25. Amendment of Act 44 of 1958
26. Amendment of Act 27 of 1961.
Assented to on 23rd
December, 1986 and published in the Gazette of India, Extraordinary, Pt II
Sec.1No.75, dated 23rd December, 1986.
An Act to prohibit the
engagement of children in certain employments and to regulate the conditions of
work of children in certain other employments
Be it enacted by Parliament in the Thirty-seventh Year of the Republic of India as follows,
THE CHILD
Labour
(Prohibition and Regulation)
Act, 1986
PART I
Preliminary
1. Short
title, extent and commencement. -
(1) This Act may be called the Child Labour
(Prohibition and Regulation) Act, 1986.
(2) It extends to the whole of India.
(3) The provisions of this
Act, other than Part III, shall come into force it once', and Part III shall
come into force on such date a, the Central Government may, by notification in the
Official Gazette, appoint and different dates may be appointed for different
States and for different classes of establishments.
2. Definitions. -In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires, -
(i) “Appropriate Government”
means, in relation to art establishment under the control of the Central
Government or a railway administration or a major port or a mine or oilfield,
the Central l Government, and in all other cases, the State Government;
(ii) “Child” means a person who has not
completed his fourteenth year of age;
(iii) “Day” means a period of twenty-four hours
beginning, midnight;
(iv) “Establishment” includes a shop, commercial
establishment, workshop, farm, residential hotel, restaurant, eating house,
theatre or other place of public amusement or entertainment;
(v) “Family” in relation to an occupier, means
the individual, the wife or husband, as the case tiny be, of such individual,
and their children, brother or sister of such individual;
(vi) “Occupier” in relation to an establishment
or a workshop, means the person who has the ultimate control over the affairs
of the establishment or workshop;
(vii) “Port authority” means any authority
administering port
(vii) “Prescribed” means prescribed by rules made
under Section 18;
(ix) “Week” means a period of seven day beginning
at mid-night on Saturday night or such other night as may be approved in
writing for a particular area by the Inspector ;
(x) “Workshop” means any premises (including
tire precincts thereof) wherein any industrial process is carried on, but does
not include any premises to which the provision of Section 67 of the Factories
Act, 1948 (63 of 1948), for the time being, apply.
PART II
Prohibition of
employment of children in certain occupations and
And processes
3. Prohibition of employment of children in
certain occupations and processes. - No child
shall be employed or permitted to work in any of the occupations set forth in
Part A of the or in any workshop wherein any of the processes set forth in Part
B of the Schedule is carried on;
Provided that nothing in
this section shall apply to any workshop wherein any process is carried on by
the occupier with the aid of his family or to any school established by, or
receiving assistance or recognition from Government.
4. Power
to amend the Schedule.- The Central Government after
giving by notification in the Official Gazette, not less than three month’s
notice of its intention so to do, may, like notification, add any occupation or process to the Schedule and thereupon
the Schedule shall be deemed to have been amended accordingly.
5. Child Labour Technical Advisory
Committee. -
(1) The Central Government may, by notification
in the Gazette, constitute an advisory committee to be called the Child Labour
Technical Advisory Committee (hereafter in this section referred to as the
Committee) to advice the Central Government for the purpose of addition of
occupations and processes to the Schedule.
(2) The Committee shall consist of Chairman and
such other members not exceeding ten, as may be appointed by the Central
Government.
(3) The
Committee shall meet as often as it may consider necessary and shall have power
to regulate its own procedure.
(4) The committee may, if it deems it necessary
so to do, constitute one or more sub-committees and may appoint to any such
sub-committee, whether generally or for the consideration of any particular
matter, any person who is not a member of the committee.
(5) The term of office of the manner of filling
casual vacancies in the office of, and
the allowances, if any, payable to the Chairman and other members of the
Committee, and the conditions and restrictions subject to which the Committee
may appoint any person who is not a member of the Committee as a member of any
of its sub-committees shall be such as may be prescribed.
PART III
Regulation of
conditions of work of children
6. Application of Part. -
The
provisions of this Part shall apply to an establishment or a class of establishment
in which none of the occupations or processes referred to in Section 3 is
carried on.
7. Hours and period of
work. -
(1) No
child shall be required or permitted to work in any establishment in excess of such
number of hours as may be prescribed for such establishment or class of
establishments.
(2) The
period of work on each day shall be so fixed that no period shall exceed three
hours and that no child Chile work for more than three hours before he has had
an interval for rest for at one hour.
(3) The
period of work of a child shall be so arranged that inclusive of his interval
for rest, under sub-section (2), it shall riot be spread over more than six
hours, including the time spent in waiting for work on any day.
(4) No child shall be permitted or required to work between 7 p.m.
and 8 a.m.
(5) No
child shall be required or permitted to work overtime.
8. Weekly
holidays. - Every child employed in an establishment shall be allowed in each
week, a holidays of one whole day which day shall be specified by the occupier
in a notice permanently exhibited in a conspicuous place in the establishment
and the day so specified shall not be altered by the occupier more than once in
three months.
(1) Every occupier in relation to an establishment
in which a child was employed or permitted to work immediately before the date
of commencement of this Act in relation to such establishment shall, within a
period of thirty days form such commencement send to the Inspector within whose
local limits the establishment is situated a written notice containing the
following particulars, namely: -
(a) The name and situation of the establishment;
(b) The name of the person in actual
management of the establishment;
(c) The address to which communications
relating to the establishment should be sent; and
(d) The nature of the occupation or process carried on in the
establishment.
(2) Every
occupier in relation to an establishment, who employs, or permits to work, any
child after the date of commencement of this Act in relation to such
establishment, shall, within a period of thirty days from the date of such
employment, send to the Inspector within whose local limits the establishment
is situated, a written notice containing the particulars as are mentioned in
sub-section (1).
Explanation. - For the purpose of sub-section (1) and (2), “date
of commencement of this Act, in relation to an establishment” means the date of
bringing into force of this Act in relation to such establishment.
(3) Nothing in Section 7, 8 and 9 shall apply to any establishment
wherein any process is carried on by the occupier with the aid of his family or
to any school established by, or receiving assistance or recognition from,
Government.
10. Disputes
as to age. -
If any question arises between an Inspector and occupier as to the age of any
child who is employed or is permitted to work by him in an establishment, the
question shall, in the absence of a certificate as to the age of such child
granted by the prescribed medical authority.
11. Maintenance of register. - The re shall
be maintained by every occupier in respect of children employed or permitted to
work in any establishment, a register to be available for inspection by an
Inspector at times during working hours or when work is carried on in any such
establishment, showing--
(a) The name and date of
birth of every child so employed or permitted to work;
(b) Hours and periods of work of any such child and the intervals
of rest to which he is entitled;
(c) The nature of work of any such child; and
(d) Such other particulars as may be prescribed.
12. Display
of notice containing abstract of Sections 3 and 14. - Every railway and Ministration, every port authority and every
occupier shall cause to be displayed in a conspicuous and accessible place at
every station on its railway or within the limits of a port or at the place of
work, as the case may be, a notice in the local language and in the English
language containing an abstract of Sections 3 and 14.
(1) The appropriate Government may, by
notification in the Official Gazette, make rules for the health and safety of
the children employed or permitted to work in any establishment or class of
establishments.
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of the
foregoing provisions, the said rules may provide for all or any of the
following matters, namely: -
(a) Cleanliness in the place of work and its freedom from nuisance;
(b) Disposal of wastes and effluents;
(c) Ventilation and temperature;
(d) Dust and fume;
(e) Artificial humidification;
(f) Lighting;
(g) Drinking water;
(h) Latrine
and urinals;
(i) Spittoons;
(j) Fencing of machinery;
(k) Work
at or near machinery in motion;
(1) Employment of children on dangerous machines;
(n) Instructions, training and supervision in relation to
employment of children on dangerous machines;
(n) Device for cutting off power;
(0) Self acting machines;
(p) Easing of new machinery;
(q) Floor, stairs and means of access
(r) Pits, sumps, openings in floors, etc.
(s) Excessive weights;
(t) Protection of eyes;
(u) Explosive or inflammable dust, gas, etc.;
(v) Precautions in case of fire;
(w) Maintenance of buildings; and
(x) Safety of buildings and machinery.
PART –IV
Miscellaneous
(1) Whoever employs any child
or permits any child to work in contravention of the provisions of Section 3
shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which shall not be less than
three months but which may extend to one year or with fine which shall not be
less than ten thousand rupees but which may extend to twenty thousand rupees or
with both.
(2) Whoever, having been convicted of an
offence under Section 3, commits a like offence afterwards, he shall be
punishable with imprisonment for
a term which shall not be less than six months but which may extend to two
years.
(3) Whoever-
(a) Fails to give notice as required by Section 9; or
(b) Fails to maintain a register as required by Section II or makes
any false entry in any such register;
(c) Fails to display a notice containing an
abstract of Section 3 and this section as required by Section 12; or
(d) Fails to comply with or contravenes any
other provisions of this act or the rules made thereunder, shall be punishable
with simple imprisonment which may extend to one month or with fine which may
extend to ten thousand rupees or with both.
15. Modified application of certain laws in
relation to penalties. -
(1) Where any person is found guilty and
convicted of contravention of any of the provisions mentioned in sub-section
(2), he shall be liable to penalties as provided in sub-sections (1) and (2) of
Section 14 of this Act and not under the Acts in which those provisions are
contained.
(2) The provisions referred to in sub-section
(1) are the provisions mentioned below--
(a) Section 67 of the Factories Act, 1948 (63 of 1948)
(b) Section 40 of the Mines Act, 1952 (35 of 1952);
(c) Section 109 of the Merchant Shipping Act, 1958
(44 of 1958); and Section 21 of the Motor Transport Workers Act, 1961 (27 of
1961).
16. Procedure
relating to offences. -
(1) Any person, police officer or inspector may
file a complaint of the commission of an offence under this Act in any court of
competent jurisdiction.
(2) Every certificate as to the age of a child
which has been granted by a prescribed medical authority shall, for the
purposes of this Act, be conclusive evidence as to the age of the child to whom
it relates.
(3) No court inferior to that of a
Metropolitan Magistrate or a Magistrate of the first class shall try any
offence under this Act.
NOTES
Complaint Meaning. -The word 'complaint' has a
wide meaning since it includes even an oral allegation. It may, therefore, be assumed that no form
is prescribed which the complaint must take.
It may only be said that there must be an allegation which prima-facie
discloses the commission of an offence with the necessary facts for the Magistrate
to take action. (1970) 1 SCC 665: 1970 SCC (Cri.) 263. See also (1970) 2 SCC 414; 1970 SCC (Cri)
469.
17. Appointment of inspectors. -The appropriate Government
may appoint Inspectors for the purposes of securing compliance with the
provisions of this act and any Inspector so appointed shall be deemed to be a
public servant within the meaning of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860).
(1) The
appropriate Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette and subject
to the condition of previous publication, make rules for carrying into effect
the provisions of this Act.
(2) In particular and without prejudice to the
generality of the foregoing power, such rules may provide for all or any of the
following matters, namely: -
(a) The term of office of, the manner of
filling casual vacancies of, and the allowances payable to, the Chairman and
members of the Child Labour Technical Advisory Committee and the conditions and
restrictions subject to which a nonmember may be appointed to a subcommittee
under sub-section (5) of Section 5;
(b) Number of hours for which a child may be
required or permitted to work under sub section (1) of section 7;
(c) Grant of certificates of age in respect of
young persons in employment or seeking employment, the medical authorities,
which may issue such certificate, the form of such- certificate, the charges,
which may be made thereunder, and the manner in which such certificate may be
issued
Provided that no charge
shall be made for the issue of any such certificate if the application is
accompanied by evidence of age deemed satisfactory by the authority concerned;
(d) The other particulars, which a Register
maintained under section 11, should contain.
19. Rules and
notifications to be laid before Parliament or State Legislature. -
(1) Every rule made under this Act by the Central Government and every notification issued under Section 4, shall be laid, as soon as may be after it is made or issued, before each House of Parliament, while it is in session for a total period of thirty days which may be comprised in one session or in two or more successive sessions, and if, before the expiry of the session immediately following the session or the successive sessions aforesaid, both Houses agree in making any modification in the rule or notification or both Houses agree that the rule or notification should not be made or issued, the rule or notification shall thereafter have effect only in such modified form or be of no effect, as the case may be ; so, however, that any such modification of annulment shall be without prejudice to the validity of anything previously done under that rule or notification.
(2) Every rule made by a State Government
under this Act shall be laid as soon as may be after it is made, before the
legislature of that State.
N 0 T E S
Failure to place rules
before Houses of Parliament Effect. -In Jan Mohammad v. State of Gujarat, AIR 1966 SC
385, the validity of rules framed under the Bombay Act 22 of 1939 was
challenged on ground that the rules framed under the Act were not placed before
the Legislative Assembly at the first session and therefore they had no legal
validity. It was provided in that Act
that the rules framed undo, the Act should be laid before each of the Houses at
the session thereof next following. The
Supreme Court held that the rules were valid from the date on which they were
made and failure to place the rules before the Houses of Legislature did not
effect the validity of the rules.
20. Certain other provisions of law not barred. -Subject to the provisions
contained in Section 15, the Provisions of this Act and the rules made
thereunder shall be in addition to, an not in derogation of, the provisions of
the Factories Act, 1948 (63 of 1948), the Plantations Labour Act, 1951 (69 of
1951), and the Mines Act, 1952 (3 5 of 1952).
21. Power to remove difficulties. -
(1) If any difficulty arises in giving effect
to the provisions if this Act, the Central Government may, by order published
in the Official Gazette, make such provisions not inconsistent with the
provisions of this Act as appear to it to be necessary or expedient for removal
of the difficulty:
Provided that no such order
shall be made after the expiry of a period of three years from the date on
which this Act receives the assent of the President.
(2) Every order made under this section shall
as soon as may be after it is made, be laid before the Houses of Parliament.
(1) The Employment
of Children Act, 1938 (26 of 1938) is hereby repealed.
(2) Notwithstanding such repeal, anything done
or any action taken or purported to have been done or taken under the Act so
repealed shall, in so far as it is not inconsistent with the provisions of this
Act, be deemed to have been done or taken under the corresponding provisions of
this Act.
NOTES
The repeal of an enactment completely wipes out the law, which is the Subject matter of the repeal. It is to be deemed as having existed only for those actions, which were commenced, prosecuted and concluded. Even pending actions cannot continue. Sylhet Co-operative Central Bank Ltd, v. Dhirendra Nath De, AIR 1958 Dom 507: 1958 Nag LJ 373.
When an Act is repealed, it is the same thing as if it had never existed except with reference to such parts as are saved by the repealing statute. Wahed Hasan Khan v. State, AIR 1966 Dom 299.
23. Amendment of Act 11 of 1948. -In Section 2 of the Minimum
Wages Act, 1948, -
(i) For clause (a), the following clauses shall be substituted,
namely: -
“(a) “Adolescent' means a person who has completed his fourteenth year
of age but has not completed his eighteenth year;
(aa) “Adult” means a person who has completed his eighteenth year of
age;”
(ii) After clause (b), the following clause shall be inserted,
namely:-
“(bb) 'child' moans a person
who has not completed his fourteenth year of age ;”.
24. Amendment of Act 69 of 1951. -In the Plantations 1951,--
(a) In Section 2, in
clauses (a) and (c), for the word “fifteenth”, the word “fourteenth” shall be
substituted
(b) Section 24 shall be omitted;
(c) In Section 26, in the opening portion, the words “who has
completed his twelfth year” shall be omitted.
25. Amendment of Act 44 of 1958. -In the Merchant Shipping
Act, 1959, in Section 109, for the word “fifteen”, the word “fourteen” shall be
substituted.
26. Amendment of Act 27 of 1961. -In the Motor Transport
Workers Act, 1961, in Section 1 in clauses (a) and (c), for the word “fifteenth”,
the word “fourteenth” shall be substituted.
THE SCHEDULE
(See Section 3)
PART A
Occupations
Any occupation-connected
with-
(1) Transport of passengers, goods or mails by
railway
(2) Cinder picking, clearing of
an ash pit or building operation in the railway premises;
(3) Work in a catering
establishment at a railway station, involving the movement of a vendor or any
other employee of the establishment from one platform to another or into or out
of a moving train;
(4) Work relating to the
contruction of a railway station or with any other work where such work is done
in close proximity to or between the railway lines ;
(5) A port authority within the limits of any
port.
PART B
Processes
(1) Bidi-making.
(2) Carpet-weaving.
(3) Cement manufacture, including bagging of cement.
(4) Cloth printing, dyeing and weaving.
(5) Manufacture of matches, explosives and fire-works.
(6) Mica-cutting and splitting.
(7) Shellac manufacture.
(8) Soap manufacture.
(9) Tanning.
(10) Wool-cleaning.
(11) Building and construction industry.