Unregulated Tourism in the Himalayas Comes at the Cost of Ecological Hazards

Unregulated pilgrimage activities in increasingly eco-fragile sites in India have accelerated the retreating of glaciers. What can be done to mitigate the damage?

If you ask anyone in Kedarnath valley in the Indian state of Uttarakhand about their worst nightmare, chances are they would mention the flash floods of June 2013. Even nearly a decade later, residents in the region wonder what caused the havoc that killed more than 5,000 people and damaged properties worth millions of dollars.

Now, researchers maintain that melting glaciers played a major role in the disaster.

A study by the Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology and the Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur showed that the rapid melting of glaciers in the Himalayas can lead to sudden floods, which in turn causes serious damage to life and property.

Rapid retreat of glaciers also means the formation of glacial lakes, which pose potential threats to the population downstream. These glaciers can burst and cause massive destruction to lives and property. Scientists use the term ‘glacial lake outburst flooding’ (GLOF) to describe incidents when water breaches glacial lakes and flows into downstream rivers.

A 2019 study indicated that parts of the Hindu Kush, Karakoram and western Himalaya sub-regions contain 2,420 glacier lakes, of which 52 are potentially dangerous.

Glacial lakes can burst as a result of an earthquake or rainstorm or if they are unable to contain water any longer, which was the cause behind the disaster in Kedarnath in June 2013. The region had received an unusual amount of rainfall, which led to the depletion of the Chorabari glacier and attendant landslides. Debris then filled the glacial lake and it could not contain water anymore.

Unregulated tourism and construction

In a 2020 report, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) of the Indian government noted that the Indian Himalayan Region faces critical challenges while coping with the effects of climate change.

It also acknowledged that urban centres, towns and some villages in mountainous areas “are being burdened beyond their capacity by tourism and rural-to-urban migration.”

NDMA recommended a series of regulations that would create a buffer zone and restrict tourism in Glacial Lake Outburst Floods-prone areas and nearby regions in order to reduce the scale of pollution in those areas.

But in 2022, 100 million tourists, including pilgrims, visited Uttarakhand, and experts continue to caution that unregulated tourism that exceeds the region’s carrying capacity can have disastrous impacts.

“[The] government is planning massive tourism activities like the Char Dham project,” Hemant Dhyani, an environmental activist and former member of the Supreme Court-appointed High-Powered Committee on the Char Dham Project, told FairPlanet. “We are looking at the Himalayas as a major economic resource and exploiting it beyond its carrying capacity. This carrying capacity assessment was never done.”

Dhyani said that in 2022 more than 15,000 people were permitted to go to Badrinath and Kedarnath – two to three times more than the carrying capacity environmental experts have estimated.

For Uttarakhand, tourism is one of the major drivers of economic growth. Located in the lap of the Himalayas, this ecologically fragile region is known and revered for several Hindu temples that granted it the sobriquet of ‘Abode of Gods.’ The area is particularly famous for the pilgrimage circuit of Char Dham – Yamunotri, Gangotri, Kedarnath and Badrinath.

But environmental activists and experts have continually raised concerns over the government’s revenue-driven over-exploitation of the tourism sector at the cost of ecological hazards.

Dhyani said that religious tourism sites, such as Char Dham, have been hugely commercialised and exploited to the point of becoming unsustainable.

In March 2022, a glacier slid down in Uttarakhand’s Pithoragarh district and blocked a long stretch of the road. It took days before the road could be cleared of snow.

Environmental experts said the glacier broke off as an indication of human-made climate change in the Himalayan region, triggered by unplanned and unchecked development projects and unregulated tourism.

In the aftermath of the June 2013 tragedy in Uttarakhand, India’s Planning Commission published a Strategy Paper that mentioned that the disaster was aggravated due to the unplanned development in the region. The paper also called for regulating tourism and supporting infrastructure in eco-fragile areas like the Char Dham pilgrimage circuit.

Mountainsides being blasted off and cleared to make way for the Char Dham highway. Photo: PTI

Why glaciers melt

One of the biggest factors causing glaciers to melt is the emission of black carbon aerosols into the atmosphere.

Black carbon is emitted as a result of incomplete combustion of fossil fuels, the use of brick kilns, household cooking with firewood and the burning of animal dung and coal briquettes. The combustion of fossil fuels in motor vehicles and aircrafts also contributes to the emission of black carbon.

Scientists from the Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, an autonomous institution operating under the Ministry of Science and Technology, in a 2016 study conducted at Chirbasa station near Gangotri Glacier noted that black carbon from crop incineration and forest fires may influence the melting of Gangotri Glacier – the source of river Ganga, a site holding religious significance for millions of Indians.

A statement by the ministry noted that black carbon concentration in the region had increased by 400 times during summer, and crop burning and forest fires were the reasons behind this seasonal increase, according to the study.

“This can trigger glacial melt because of the light-absorbing nature of black carbon,” the statement further read. Since 2000, fires have damaged over 44,554 hectares of forest area, according to data from the Uttarakhand State Forest Department.

Frequent helicopter rides to and from pilgrimage sites in the area also contribute to the emission of black carbon, which in turn accelerates the recession of glaciers.

The situation is similar in the region of Kashmir, where unregulated tourism activities play a role in glacier retreat.

Also Read: Mind the Warning Signs on the Carrying Capacity of the Himalayan Terrain

A joint study from 2020 by the University of Kashmir and Nichols College in Massachusetts revealed that the Kolahoi glacier, the biggest in the region and which feeds most of its agricultural land, had lost nearly 23% of its area since 1962 and has fragmented into smaller parts.

The study warned the glacier recession has resulted in the formation of proglacial lakes, which could potentially become prone to glacial lake outburst floods.

In 2022, at least 365,000 Hindu pilgrims trekked along the treacherous routes across the mountainous terrain in southern Kashmir to pay homage to an ice stalagmite in a cave, which is regarded as a symbol of the Hindu god Shiva. This annual pilgrimage called Amarnath Yatra went on for 44 days.

Environmental activists have repeatedly warned about the environmental hazards of allowing a large number of pilgrims to visit the cave in such an ecologically sensitive area.

In a 2017 report, the Jammu and Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society noted that several glaciers, which were not far away from the pilgrimage site, were being damaged due to the over-exploitation of the region by pilgrims.

“The ecology, the environment and the health of the glacier can be under severe threat in case the Baltal route to the holy cave was frequented by thousands of pilgrims,” the report read. “The Thajiwas glacier which is not far away from the helipad at Neelgrath is at threat due to the helicopter sorties. There are three huge glaciers on the Baltal side, en route to the cave and with constant trampling by the Yatris [pilgrims], have been damaged extensively.”

The area has a carrying capacity of only 4,300 persons per day, but a report revealed that a typical pilgrimage day last year saw over 12,000 devotees visit the cave.

Despite the serious concerns raised by environmental experts, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared the Amarnath pilgrimage as beneficial for the tourism sector.

Pilgrims on the Amarnath Yatra. Photo: Hamid Khan

Disaster mitigation efforts

After reports emerged that the town of Joshimath in Uttarakhand was sinking, the government announced it would conduct a carrying-capacity study of different hill towns. It also said that it would immediately halt construction projects in areas where the carrying capacity is exceeded.

Environmental activist Hemant Dhyani said that this is an issue of policy intervention. “We should rectify our approach to development in the Himalayas.”

In 2014, the government in Uttarakhand published an Action Plan on Climate Change, in which it stated the administration will “put into motion a process of building awareness on climate change and its impacts among the population and communities in general,” and that “the state will examine the possibility of incorporating climate change – related modules into the educational curriculum across various levels.”

“Appropriate external agencies will be co-opted as necessary to support the awareness and capacity-building processes,” the action plan further stated.

Dhyani maintained that the initiatives referenced in the government’s climate change action plan and the government’s 2012 notification to declare the Bhagirathi river an eco-sensitive zone should all be implemented.

“That is the blueprint and that should be replicated across all river valleys in the Himalayas to protect the massive land-use change in the region,” he said.

Ayush Joshi, an environmental technologist and climate change researcher, told FairPlanet that there is an urgent need to “stop current forms of infrastructural growth in sensitive regions.”

“[The government should] establish an independent Himalayan Commission that can permit, regulate and prohibit various shapes and forms of development and establish a 100 km buffer [from glaciers towards downstream] as Sensitive Zones across the state,” Joshi added.

In Kashmir, the administration launched an initiative in 2022 to reduce the amount of trash along the route of the Amarnath pilgrimage. It stationed over 300 volunteers along the pilgrimage route who collected and processed the waste, and the organic waste was then converted into compost.

As a pilot project, a start-up based in Indore, Madhya Pradesh installed six solar cookers on the Amarnath route last year, with the goal of reducing the use of firewood for making tea and other food items for pilgrims.

Qadri Inzamam and Haziq Qadri are independent multimedia journalistß based out of New Delhi.

This investigation has been supported by the Environmental Reporting Collective (ERC). 

This article was originally published on FairPlanet and has been republished under a Creative Commons License.

Telangana Is Inching Closer to Becoming a Total Surveillance State

The CCTV network, paired with facial recognition technology, an ever-expanding database of biometric information and a willing police force, has the potential to monitor its citizens to a worrying degree.

For several days after police took Masood’s photo, he was worried about how his photos would be used. So he sent a legal notice to the police asking them about the procedure, its legality, whether these photos were being used for facial recognition, and whether the images would be stored in a database. He also sought information about the privacy of the data and accountability mechanisms in place. But there was no response. Then he filed a case against the state of Telangana, which is pending in the court.

The Indian government’s obsession with surveillance is nothing new. In 2021, the Pegasus Project, an investigation by a consortium of international journalists, revealed that the Indian government had been spying on more than 300 people, including journalists, activists, and politicians.

Also read: Snoop List Has 40 Indian Journalists, Forensic Tests Confirm Presence of Pegasus Spyware on Some

Telangana is the youngest state in India. It was carved out as a separate political entity in June 2014 from Andhra Pradesh. As a young state, Telangana has been eager to experiment with the use of technology. Its capital city, Hyderabad, is one of the main technology hubs in India.

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Srinivas Kodali, a researcher with the advocacy organisation Free Software Movement of India, said the Telangana government has been open to allowing big technology companies to test their software there. According to Kodali, the bureaucracy in Hyderabad touts its innovation while implementing surveillance without any oversight.

Kodali said the worldwide effort to patch the Y2K bug helped Hyderabad become a global centre of technology development.

“The government back then helped local IT companies get experience in software development, and they decided to buy anything they developed. So now when they develop facial recognition systems, blockchain, and other technologies, the government happily buys it to experiment on the citizens,” he told us. That includes technologies in governance and policing, such as the use of facial recognition technology to find missing persons, identify the voters at polling booths, distribute rations among the lower-middle class, and issue pension certificates.

Through its “smart governance” programme, Samagram, Telangana keeps a centralised database that includes information about the employment status, personal lives (including marital status and children), and birth and death details for every citizen.

But innovation isn’t the only reason for Hyderabad’s surveillance boom. In August 2007, twin blasts killed 42 people at two crowded public places in the city. After that, there was a rise in the use of CCTV cameras. A year later, the 2008 Mumbai attack on Taj Hotel and some other landmarks led the police across India to adapt new technologies.

That also included Hyderabad, home to about half of the total Muslim population in Telangana. In 2013, terrorists struck again in Hyderabad, killing 21 people and injuring more than 100 in two powerful explosions. As an effort to modernise police, a law was enacted that required all establishments to install CCTV cameras if they attracted a crowd of more than 100 people.

Now, Telangana is one of the most surveilled states in India. The national capital New Delhi has about 33 CCTV cameras for every 1,000 people, according to a study. But Telangana’s capital city, Hyderabad, has 36 CCTV cameras per 1,000 people, making it one of most surveilled cities in the world.

There are nearly 900,000 cameras installed, most of them concentrated in Hyderabad. According to the Bureau of Police Research and Development under the Indian Ministry of Home Affairs, in January 2020, 61% of all police CCTV cameras in India were in Telangana. A study by New Delhi-based digital liberties organisation Internet Freedom Foundation found that Telangana has the highest number of facial recognition technology projects of any Indian state.

Also read: Hyderabad ‘On the Brink of Becoming a Total Surveillance City’, Says Amnesty

In 2021, the Internet Freedom Foundation, Amnesty International, and global human rights group Article 19 partnered to map the locations of visible outdoor CCTV infrastructure in two sampled neighbourhoods in Hyderabad: Kala Pathar and Kishan Bagh.

“Based on geospatial analysis, it was estimated that in these neighbourhoods at least 530,864 and 513,683 square meters, respectively, were covered by CCTV cameras – a remarkable total of 53.7% and 62.7% of the entire area,” the report revealed. Cybersecurity experts say the region is on the brink of becoming a site of total surveillance, where it is nearly impossible to walk without being exposed to facial recognition cameras.

Telangana’s descent into a highly surveilled state began around 2015 with cordon-and-search operations, which involve cordoning off a neighbourhood, conducting door-to-door searches, and taking fingerprint scans and photos of the citizens. Activists say this exercise usually takes place in areas where Muslims and other socioeconomically marginalised communities live.

The police also launched Operation Chabutra, in which the police detain people who roam around the streets late at night, collect and store their data, and match that against the existing criminal records. The operation draws its name from the Urdu word chabutra, meaning a raised stone platform, which is usually built in front of houses in Hyderabad. These chabutra are places where people usually sit and socialise till late in the night.

What sets these operations apart from those in other Indian states is the use of technology to collect and store data. In another style of policing, the cops randomly stop and search commuters and pedestrians, and take their photos and biometrics. That is what happened with Masood when his photo was taken by the police using an app called TSCOP. The app is equipped with facial recognition technology that can run the images through India’s national Crime and Criminal Tracking Networks and Systems in real time. The CCTNS, a project by the Indian Home Ministry, is a nationwide database that contains millions of images of criminals and missing people.

According to a report by Amnesty India, the Telangana police’s facial recognition technology scans distinct features of a person’s face to create a biometric map. An algorithm then searches for potential matches using images of people’s faces scraped from social media profiles and other databases.

The police’s practice of photographing people and taking their fingerprint scans to build a criminal database violates Indian law because India’s Identification of Prisoners Act, 1920 prohibits police from taking photographs of people, unless they are arrested or convicted of a crime. Sharing such photographs with other law enforcement agencies is also not permitted.

Anushka Jain, associate counsel for surveillance and transparency for the Internet Freedom Foundation, said that taking photos and fingerprint scans of citizens casts suspicion of criminality on the entire population. “Because by that logic, the police can argue that anybody can commit a crime and everybody should have their record on the criminal database. It goes against any established principles and constitutional rights,” Jain said.

Now, the Telangana police have built a Command and Control Centre from where all of the state’s facial recognition–capable cameras will be monitored in real time. The Command and Control Centre is supposed to be operational later in July. (Just recently, the futuristic Command and Control Centre was robbed. Unidentified men stole 38 copper wire bundles worth about $12,600 from the facility.)

Hyderabad’s Command and Control Centre is currently under construction in the Banjara Hills neighbourhood. Photo: cm.telangana.gov.in.

The police say that the Command and Control Centre will be equipped with advanced technology to help police in reducing crime. The government claimed that during natural calamities, different state agencies would be able to monitor the situation of the affected areas and mobilise relief and rescue operations.

According to the government, if a person goes out, 50 cameras will capture them by the time they are back to their home. “The cameras cover every inch of Telangana. All these cameras will be integrated and monitored in real-time at the Command and Control Centre, which will be able to process the footage from 100,000 cameras in under a minute,” the Telangana government said in a tweet earlier this year.

India currently does not have a law for personal data protection and privacy. In the absence of a legal framework or oversight, the proliferation of CCTVs across the state—airports, polling booths, business areas, and roads—raises concerns over the limits on its use.

Under India’s newly enacted Criminal Procedure (Identification) Act, which aims to modernise the criminal justice system by linking it to technology, the police can take biometric data, biological samples, and behavioral attributes, including signatures of any arrested person. But the collection and storage of common citizens’ data and its protection worries cybersecurity experts and digital rights activists.

Though the Supreme Court of India recognised privacy as a fundamental right in August 2017, there is still not any legal framework to govern the issues related to personal data protection and privacy. A 10-member committee in 2018 submitted a comprehensive report on data protection, suggesting a draft data protection bill. A revised version is still pending before a Joint Parliamentary Committee.

It is the absence of this legal framework that worries the rights activists about how the data at the Command and Control Centre may end up being used. “It could lead to mass surveillance by the state instead of protecting civilians from crimes,” Jain said.

Kodali told us that he worries that what is happening in Telangana will soon spread across the country: “These are essentially experiments that are being carried out in Hyderabad so that the Indian Home Ministry can implement it across the country.”

The concerns are not unfounded. The Indian government plans to implement an Automated Facial Recognition System across the country that will be able to extract an image from a video and match it with the image of an individual whose record is already in an existing database. It will be effectively the world’s largest facial recognition system.

Facial recognition technology and the databases that power it are becoming increasingly profitable for government surveillance, law enforcement and even marketing. Photo: Reuters

The major concern raised by the activists is how the entire surveillance infrastructure could be used against minorities. Historically, Jain said, “the policing system in India has been casteist and biased against certain communities. If the existing policing procedures and actions are not corrected, the existing biases and harms will also creep into these technologies.”

The Indian government and its police already have a record of using facial recognition technology in contexts where human rights are at stake. The technology was used while enforcing COVID-19 lockdowns and identifying citizens who protested against a discriminatory citizenship law. The police in New Delhi used facial recognition technology to identify farmer protesters who held demonstrations against the government’s contentious agricultural laws.

Digital rights activists and cybersecurity experts are also suspicious because of the selective use of technology. Masood said the police only cordon low-income and Muslim neighborhoods when they take credentials from people. “I have observed that the police do not take fingerprint scans or photographs in high-income societies,” Masood told Slate.

It is because of this bias that Masood said there is a possibility the whole surveillance infrastructure may be used against Muslims and Dalits—outcaste Hindus, or “untouchables”—in the future. “The way the Israeli government uses facial recognition technology against Palestinians, we are worried it might happen to us as well. … There is a possibility this whole infrastructure could be used against minorities in [the] future.”

This piece was originally published on Future Tense, a partnership between Slate magazine, Arizona State University, and New America.

How Digital Snooping on Sanitation Workers Is Worsening Their Struggles

Lower-caste cleaners must wear GPS-enabled smartwatches, raising questions about their privacy and data protection.

Munesh sits by the roadside near a crowded market in Chandigarh, a city in India’s north, on a January day. She is flanked by several other women, all of them sweepers hired by the Chandigarh Municipal Corporation. She shows the smartwatch she is wearing and says, “See, I didn’t even touch it, but the camera has turned on.”

Munesh, who estimates she is in her 40s and, like many Indians, goes by just one name, is one of around 4,000 such sanitation workers. The corporation makes it mandatory for them to wear smartwatches — called Human Efficiency Tracking Systems — fitted with GPS trackers. Each one has a microphone, a SIM embedded for calling workers, and a camera, so that the workers can send photos to their supervisors as proof of attendance. In Chandigarh, this project is run by Imtac India, an IT services company, at a cost of an estimated $278,000 per year. Meanwhile, sanitation workers say that the government has not invested in personal protective gear throughout the Covid-19 pandemic, and that they have long worked without medical care and other vital social services.

From the time the sanitation workers turn on their watches until they turn them off, their GPS locations are monitored in real time by officials at the Command and Control Center of the Chandigarh Municipal Corporation. The workers appear as green dots on a computer screen and as they move around in their assigned areas, the green dot moves along a line.

The camera fitted on the tracker is what scares Munesh and many other sanitation workers, who mostly come from the Dalit community or other Hindu lower castes. (In the Indian subcontinent, the caste system has long categorised and limited people’s education and work prospects; the job of cleaning or sanitation has always been linked to the lower castes.) Wearing the tracker is mandatory. According to Krishan Kumar Chadha, the former president of the Chandigarh Sanitation Workers’ Union, taking it off incurs a fine of half a day’s salary, around $3 to $4, although Abhay Khare of Imtac India denies there is such a fine. Workers also have to take the devices home. They worry about privacy leaks and the inability to turn off the trackers and cameras — even when they are in the bathroom.

One of the flagship programmes of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is to bring “digital innovations” to the country. Under this Digital India initiative, Modi has been pushing for cashless or digital transactions, digital attendance, and surveillance systems, like the one in place for the sanitation workers. This digital attendance and tracking system is also part of another much-hyped campaign of the government: the Clean India Mission, also known as Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, which launched in October 2014 with the goal of a clean and sanitary India.

These systems come with incentives for the municipalities. Civic bodies with a digital attendance system earn extra points toward an annual list of the country’s “cleanest” cities, an honour that gives them bragging rights. This online surveillance of sanitation workers is currently operational in more than a dozen cities, including Indore, Nagpur, Navi Mumbai, Panchkula, Thane, and Mysuru.

The Chandigarh Municipal Corporation introduced GPS-enabled smartwatches for its sanitation workers in 2019. The government says that the tracking devices bring transparency into the attendance system and prevent workers from allowing someone else to sub in for them.

But the workers have been protesting ever since, arguing that the watches violate their privacy and rights. For her part, Munesh says, “it’s like an iron shackle around our necks.”

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In August 2017, the Supreme Court of India, through a judgment, recognised privacy as a fundamental right.

“Among basic rights conferred on individuals by the Constitution as a shield against excesses by the State, some rights are at the core of human existence,” the top court said in its judgment. “Thus, they are granted the status of fundamental, inalienable rights essential to enjoy liberty. Liberty is the freedom of an individual to do what he pleases and the exercise of that freedom would be meaningless in the absence of privacy.”

In 2018, a 10-member committee, headed by a retired Supreme Court judge, submitted a comprehensive report on data protection. The committee also suggested a draft data protection bill; a revised version is still pending before a Joint Parliamentary Committee and could be scrapped in favour of new data privacy legislation.

When it comes to surveillance of sanitation workers, “the Constitution does not allow this kind of a thing,” says Pavan Duggal, a cyberlaw consultant and advocate for the Supreme Court of India. As such, Duggal argues, the sanitation tracking system violates workers’ right to privacy.

Although a law passed in 2000 called the Indian Information and Technology Act does allow digital surveillance or interception of citizens under certain circumstances, Duggal adds, the sanitation trackers amount to “crystal clear illegal interception.”

A 29-year-old cleaner named Neerjo didn’t know that officials at the Command Center can trace the location of her house through the tracker until her interviews with Undark. She was taken aback. “We did not know this,” she says and looks at her co-workers in surprise. “We have never been told anything about the watch.” Undark repeatedly contacted Chandigarh Municipal Corporation Commissioner Anindita Mitra to verify this and other details about the smartwatch program; the calls and emails went unanswered.

Still, Abhay Khare, business head of Imtac India — a distribution partner of ITI Limited in Chandigarh — insists that the GPS trackers are not breaking laws, and that they follow all the parameters of data safety and privacy. He adds that the devices are also used for government security, “so the ITI Limited is very careful about these parameters.”

Before he left his position as project coordinator of Chandigarh’s human efficiency tracking system program, Suraj Kumar also told Undark that on the smartwatches, neither the microphone nor the camera can be controlled remotely, which means that no one in the control centre can turn them on.

But that does not assuage the fears of the sanitation workers, particularly women. Many say they avoid using the bathroom while on duty. Others put the smartwatches in purses or pockets beforehand — because, says a worker named Mithlesh, “sometimes we go to [the] washroom and the camera turns on automatically, causing problems.” Around a dozen women who spoke to Undark shared the same concern.

And even though the officials at the CMC stress that the data of sanitation workers are secured and deleted after three months, the workers also complain they often receive spam calls on their smartwatches. “One night, I was awoken by a call on my smartwatch around 11:30 [pm],” says one worker, Shakuntala. “I picked it up and some man was asking me who I was. I hung up, knowing it was an unknown number and not someone from my office. How did he get my number if the SIM was given by the Corporation?”

Khare says the GPS trackers do not allow unwanted calls. “It’s impossible they would get spam calls,” he says, adding he had checked it himself.

The workers say the tracking device invades their personal lives. They are required to charge GPS devices at home each night, to make sure the watches remain on during working hours the next day. If the watch is off, the workers are marked absent, risking their wages. According to Chadha of the Chandigarh Sanitation Workers’ Union, the fine for losing the tracker ranges from around $107 to $134, almost their month’s salary.

Taking these devices home aggravates the problems, says Shakuntala. “When I am around the watch, I get conscious,” she adds.

In each part of the city, a supervisor looks after a team of sanitation workers and marks their attendance. A supervisor named Satyapal Singh tells Undark that if a worker’s watch turns off or shows them outside the area where they should be working, even if they are marked present on the register, they don’t get paid.

Pradeep, who drives a sewage truck, says he once got a call from his supervisor, inquiring why he was absent for a week. Although he had been at work, at the Command Center, he was marked inactive. It took Pradeep a few days to prove that he was on duty, he says: “My salary would have been slashed otherwise.”

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A few days before India’s Republic Day in January 2022, Chadha, the former president of the Chandigarh Sanitation Workers’ Union and a current senior member, sits in his office, a makeshift tin shed, outside a bustling market near the Municipal Corporation office. He sits with workers as they talk about the cleanliness preparation ahead of the special occasion.

But he also stresses the union’s presence at an upcoming protest against the tracking devices.

He breaks his conversation with a worker and points towards his smartwatch: “What is this watch?” he asks and leans forward. Then he pauses and sinks in his chair and answers himself, “It is a handcuff that enslaves poor workers.” Chadha draws reference from ancient times, saying it is akin to the times when lower castes were physically chained and forced to do menial jobs.

Khare of IMTAC India boasts of the increased productivity the tracking system has achieved. He says that some local governments using the smartwatches to track field workers have detected employees farming out their work to other people, and that it has been able to save a huge amount of state expenditure.

But the workers complain not only of surveillance, but poor working conditions. At the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, doctors and other health workers in India sometimes faced discrimination and harassment for working with infected patients. But they were also called “frontline warriors” and promised medical insurance. The sanitation workers, who were out on roads, keeping the cities clean, say they have not received adequate personal protection equipment during the pandemic. In a June 2020 independent survey of 214 sanitation workers in several Indian states and metropolitan areas, 56 percent said they weren’t given any Covid-19 safety instructions or training. (Twenty-six of those surveyed did not answer this question.)

Even before the Covid-19 pandemic, the sanitation workers say, they were never provided with any safety or protection gear. They also say they are not given any paid leave, medical treatment, or insurance.

Bezwada Wilson, National Convener of Safai Karmachari Andolan — a human rights organizstion pushing to end manual scavenging, a traditional practice reserved for Indians from Scheduled Castes — says the surveillance, which he calls illegal, is dehumanising. It reinforces the idea of slavery, he adds, and stems from the casteist mindset.

“It’s modern-day slavery,” he said, adding that India’s “dominant” castes “still see the sanitation workers as untouchables. As if that was not enough, this tracking device has only reinforced that idea.”

Before her lunch break ends, Munesh asks for help with checking how many steps she has walked so far that day. Since her shift started at 7 am, her tracker shows she has walked 2,231 steps in the first half of her shift. There are four more hours to go, and one of her coworkers says they cannot afford breaks. Even if they finish their jobs early, they should appear in motion on the screen.

As soon as her lunch break ends, Munesh prepares to leave. She picks up a broom, walks away towards a bustling market, and bends to sweep the litter.

Qadri Inzamam is an independent journalist based out of New Delhi. He writes on the intersections of politics, human rights, and technology.

Haziq Qadri is an independent multimedia journalist based out of New Delhi. His work focuses on the human rights, politics, and health.

This article was originally published on Undark. Read the original article.