

Several industries such as carpet-making, fire-cracker manufacturing, marble inlay work, filigree metal work, and many others are particularly notorious for using child labour as the childrens small thin hands are better suited for the fine motor skills required by these processes. I thought of the number of times I have seen young children working at roadside tea stalls across India, seemingly content and happy with their lives. As I sipped a cup of piping hot masala chai, the characteristic Indian tea, I could see BBA activists busy at work on the lower level of the office. 'While everyone cannot dedicate their lives to ending child labour, at the very least they could boycott those places and goods that employ child labour.'Her statement carries weight. 'It is extremely overwhelming - the BBA receives dozens of calls every day from common people, asking us what they can do about child labour,' a female activist working in victim assistance, who wished to remain anonymous, told me. Child labour activists are hopeful that BBAs Nobel Peace Prize will lead to a renewed discussion and initiative among all sections of Indian society to ultimately end child labour. This episode laid the foundations of the Indias largest grassroots movement against child labour and trafficking.Today, Satyarthi is a world-renowned voice against the exploitation of children, making headlines in 2014 when he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize along with Pakistani activist Malala Yousafzai. Soon after, Satyarthi the engineer and his team of like-minded activists rescued 34 brick kiln workers and the Khans 15-year old daughter, Sabo. Exploited by his employer and ignored by the authorities, he chanced across the newsletter of an organization working for the socially marginalized and somehow managed to locate their office.Khan found an unexpected source of help in an electrical engineer-turned journalist and human rights activist, Kailash Satyarthi, and his team of like-minded activists at Bachpan Bachao Andolan (BBA), or Save the Children Mission. His family members had been serving as bonded labourers in a brick kiln for 20 years in order to repay a debt owed to the kiln owner, who now threatened to sell Khans adolescent daughter to a brothel. Could Ishak be next on the list, or is he the man responsible? Tracking down his more ‘unsavoury’ allies, Serena is shocked to encounter a familiar face: that of her grieving ex-partner, former Malaysian ICD officer Megat Jamil (Bront Palarae).Directions: Read the following passage carefully, and answer the questions that follow.In 1980, Wasal Khan, a brick kiln worker from Sirhind, a city in Indias north-western state of Punjab, came to the capital city of New Delhi, driven by desperation and fear. As Serena and Heri work together to catch the killer, their inquiries lead them to industrialist/kingpin Datuk Ishak Hassan (Wan Hanafi Su), whose prominent family and known associates all have some connection to the victims. Seeking answers, Heri finds a way to insert himself into the Malaysian investigation. Meanwhile, in Jakarta, for ICD Lieutenant Heriyanto Salim (Ario Bayu), the case turns personal when his brother is found murdered in similar circumstances. Called in to investigate, Singaporean International Crimes Division (ICD) officer Serena Teo (Rebecca Lim) takes charge of a case across the border where a family has been slaughtered aboard a luxury yacht in Johor.
RAZIA SULTAN EPISODE 31 SERIES
A series of brutal murders, each sharing a signature MO, takes place across Malaysia and Indonesia.
