Uzbek authorities have increased the use of forced labor by adults and older children in the cotton sector during the past year in an effort to shift the burden away from younger children in response to public scrutiny and international pressure. Human Rights Watch found that for the 2012 harvest, the Uzbek government forced over 1 million of its own citizens -- children and adults, including its teachers, doctors, and nurses – to harvest cotton in abusive conditions on threat of punishment. Uzbek authorities refused to allow international monitors into the country for the fourth year in a row and arrested and intimidated local activists and independent journalists who attempted to report on the forced labor situation. (9 PHOTOS)
Labor Abuses In Uzbekistan's Cotton Fields

1
A “Cotton Contract” is shown from the 2011 harvest. The “contract” obligates the signer to participate in the harvest, with punishment for “not fulfilling the commands,” including meeting a daily quota.

2
A child picks cotton in September 2012, Suyima Pakhtakor, Jizzakh.

3
Boy picking cotton, October 2012

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A woman who identified herself as a teacher picks cotton in Jizzakh Province on September 25, 2012.