History and Pervasiveness of Slavery and Organized Crime in India
🤔 A Note on Your Query
The search results contain extensive information on the history of these phenomena and their pervasiveness (scale and entrenchment). However, they do not directly address the "persuasiveness" of these institutions—meaning justifications, ideological defenses, or public rationales used to support them. The following analysis focuses on history and pervasiveness.
1. Slavery and Bonded Labour
Ancient and Medieval History
Ancient Period (debated origins): The status of early terms like dasa is contested. While some texts suggest enslavement through war or debt, others interpret dasa as "servant" or "enemy," not necessarily "slave". The Arthashastra (4th century BCE) regulated slavery but prohibited the enslavement of Aryas (all four varnas), allowing it only for Mlecchas (foreigners). Slaves had rights to property, wages, and redemption.
Medieval Period (significant escalation): Slavery intensified during the Delhi Sultanate and Mughal era. Military conquests generated mass captives; Al-Utbi recorded 100,000 youths captured by Mahmud of Ghazni in 1001, and later slaves became so cheap (2–10 dirhams) they flooded Central Asian markets. Sultans like Alauddin Khilji owned 50,000 slave-boys, and Firuz Shah Tughluq owned 180,000 slaves. Enslavement was often used as a tool to extract revenue from resistant communities.
Colonial Period: The Portuguese imported African slaves (c.1530–1740). European colonialism saw Indians taken abroad via the Indian Ocean slave trade. Slavery was legally abolished in British India in 1843 and 1861, but was replaced by a massive indentured labour (girmitiya) system—over 1 million Indians sent to European colonies under conditions described by historians as akin to slavery.
Pervasiveness in Modern India
Legal Framework: The Constitution (Article 23) prohibits forced labour (begar). The Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1976 criminalizes debt bondage. Recent reforms via the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 strengthen anti-trafficking laws (Sections 143, 144) and explicitly link organized crime to human trafficking (Section 111).
Current Scale: Despite legal abolition, modern slavery persists. The Global Slavery Index 2023 estimates India has 11 million people living in modern slavery—the highest of any country. Research confirms Scheduled Castes are disproportionately affected. The government aims to release and rehabilitate 10 million bonded labourers by 2030, acknowledging significant delays in state-level implementation.
2. Organized Crime
History and Evolution
Early Forms: Historical banditry (dacoity) and Thuggee—organized gangs of highway robbers who strangled victims—operated in northern India. The British established the Thuggee and Dacoity Department in 1830.
Post-Independence (1940s–1980s): The Mumbai underworld emerged with three dominant figures: Karim Lala (Pathan mafia, bootlegging, extortion), Haji Mastan (gold smuggling, Bollywood financing), and Varadarajan Mudaliar (liquor, dock cargo, narcotics). They operated with community backing and ran parallel justice systems.
1980s–Present: D-Company, led by Dawood Ibrahim, transformed organized crime by merging it with terrorism. Ibrahim is an Interpol-wanted fugitive, designated a "Specially Designated Global Terrorist" by the US (2003), and allegedly linked to the 1993 Bombay bombings and the 2008 Mumbai attacks. He is believed to operate from Karachi with alleged ISI ties. Other major figures include Chhota Rajan (extradited from Bali in 2015) and Arun Gawli (convicted 2012).
Pervasiveness and Political Nexus
Criminalization of Politics: A 1991 analysis states that during the 1960s, gangsters gained control over politicians. Persons with criminal backgrounds became leading government officials, neutralizing police and courts. Smuggling, drug trafficking, and gun running thrived "in collusion with criminal politicians".
Geographic Spread: Beyond Mumbai, organized crime is active in Goa (international drug cartels—Russian, Israeli, Nigerian), Punjab (extortion, arms smuggling, Indo-Canadian gang links), and Andhra Pradesh (factionalism based on blood feuds, illegal mining, real estate mafia).
Legal Responses: States have enacted special laws like MCOCA (Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act, 1999) and similar bills in Gujarat, Karnataka, Rajasthan, and Haryana. These laws depart from standard criminal procedure—confessions to police are admissible, bail conditions are stringent, and communication interception is permitted. Courts have upheld these laws but cautioned against wrongful application that curtails liberty.
Recent Legislative Action (2023–2026): The BNS 2023 now includes a specific offence of "Organised Crime" (Section 111) covering trafficking, prostitution, and kidnapping, with mandatory minimum punishments. This formally codifies organized crime at the central level.
📌 Summary: Pervasiveness Compared
Slavery/Bonded Labour: 11 million estimated victims; legally abolished but socially embedded via caste and debt; rehabilitation targets of 10 million indicate systemic scale.
Organized Crime: Deeply entrenched, with transnational networks (Dawood Ibrahim), political corruption documented since the 1960s, and specialized state laws required to combat it. The explicit inclusion in the 2023 Penal Code confirms its recognized threat level.
The search results do not provide information on the "persuasiveness" (ideological justifications) for either slavery or organized crime in India. If you are specifically looking for historical texts, religious sanctions, or political rhetoric used to defend these practices, I recommend refining your search with terms like "justification of caste and slavery" or "political patronage of organized crime."
Analysis based on available search results — formatted without bullet lists.