Labour Rights Survey Report: A Deep Look into Field-Level Realities

Labour Rights Survey Report: A Deep Look into Field-Level Realities

Date: July 2025
Location: Pakistan
Total Workers Surveyed: 510

This comprehensive field survey of labourers across different sectors highlights the prevailing working conditions, awareness levels, and rights violations faced by low-income workers. The insights gathered present an urgent case for intervention and reform.

In-Depth Data Summary Table

CategoryResponse Breakdown
Total Participants510
Gender DistributionMale: 447, Female: 62
Age Range18 to 74 years
EducationIlliterate: 485, Primary: 23, Middle: 1
Source of JobDirect: 393, Agent: 47, Family/Friend: 69
Job TORs ExplainedYes: 453, No: 15, Partial: 41
Promises Being MetYes: 470, Partial: 28, No: 11
Working Hours8 hours: 394, 8–12 hours: 104, 12+ hours: 11
Payment on TimeMostly:46, Always: 464
Provision of FoodNo: 510
Provision of Filtered WaterPartial: 4, No: 506
Provision of ResidenceYes: 470, Partial, 40 
Health Benefits ProvidedYes: 4, No: 506
Under DebtYes: 455, No: 54
Movement LibertyYes: 501, No:8
Awareness of Human RightsYes: 8, No: 494, Partial:7
Awareness of ExploitationYes:2, No: 496, Partial:11
Reported ThreatsYes:42, No: 420, Partial:47
Reported TortureYes: 1, No: 490, Partial:18
Salary ForfeitureYes: 6, No: 482, Partial:21

Demographics & Literacy Crisis

Out of 510 workers, the overwhelming majority (485) are illiterate. Only 24 individuals had even basic schooling. Most were male, with a small female representation. This educational gap critically limits their ability to read contracts, understand rights, or negotiate wages.

This literacy vacuum lays the foundation for unchecked exploitation.

Employment Source & Transparency

Most workers got jobs directly (393), while others relied on friends/family (69) or agents (47) — a known pathway for manipulation.

Regarding job terms:

  • 453 were clearly informed,

  • 15 had no information, and

  • 41 were only partially briefed.

Employment Source

Even a few cases of undisclosed terms are serious. Agent-based recruitment requires tighter regulation.

Promises vs Reality

Out of the 509 individuals surveyed, a majority — 453 reported that the terms of their job were discussed beforehand, and 470 stated that their employers were fulfilling those promises. However, deeper inquiry revealed a critical insight: many workers equated “promises being met” with receiving what their forefathers traditionally earned. Due to a widespread lack of awareness about their actual labour rights, most were unaware of what they were truly entitled to — such as regulated working hours, fair wages, benefits, and safe conditions. This generational acceptance has led to a distorted perception of fairness in employment.

  • 470 workers confirmed employers met promised terms,

  • 28 said partially, and

  • 11 said no.

Partial fulfilment still counts as a rights gap.

Debt Dependency

More than 89% of the surveyed individuals (455 out of 509) admitted they were currently under debt. This financial dependency often binds them to their employers, making it difficult to leave or demand better working conditions. The high debt levels raise red flags about systemic exploitation and the absence of social safety nets.

455 workers are under debt.
A staggering number trapped in financial bondage — indicating systemic bonded labour practices.

Freedom of Movement

An overwhelming majority (501) reported having the liberty to move, indicating there were no strict physical restrictions. While this appears positive on the surface, it does not necessarily imply full freedom — especially if other factors like financial dependency, fear of losing shelter, or job insecurity prevent them from exercising that liberty.

  • 501 workers report freedom of movement.

  • Only 8 said they are not free.

A hopeful statistic — but it doesn’t offset other serious concerns.

Awareness of Rights & Exploitation

This section shows a deeply alarming gap: only 8 individuals were aware of their basic human rights, and just 2 recognised signs of exploitation. With 494 and 496 respondents respectively saying “No” to these questions, it’s clear that the majority are working under conditions they don’t even know could violate international labour laws. Without awareness, seeking justice or even questioning maltreatment becomes nearly impossible.

  • Only 8 workers knew about human rights, and 2 about exploitation.

  • A small fraction were “partially aware.” The rest — over 95% — had no idea.

This is alarming. Rights cannot be claimed when they are not known.

Lack of Basic Necessities

While this round of data did not explicitly ask about food, water, or shelter, secondary findings strongly imply a lack of access to basic necessities like clean water, nutrition, and healthcare. The absence of awareness, education, and health benefits creates an environment where workers are left vulnerable not only to financial exploitation but also physical neglect.

This is a massive violation of workers’ rights. Employers providing shelter but neglecting nutrition, clean water, and health access are failing the most basic responsibilities.

Threats, Torture & Salary Forfeiture

While 420 reported no threats, 42 individuals confirmed receiving them, and 47 had mixed or partial experiences. A small number (1) reported torture, but 18 mentioned partial instances — these numbers may be underreported due to fear or normalisation of abuse. Similarly, forfeiture of salary — a direct violation of labour rights — was confirmed by 6 individuals, with 21 reporting it in partial form.

  • 42 workers faced threats, and 47 more faced partial intimidation.

  • 1 reported torture, with 18 more having partial experiences.

  • 6 had salaries fully withheld, and 21 partially withheld.

These are clear signs of coercion and abuse in the workplace, demanding immediate legal and humanitarian response.

Conclusion

This updated data paints an even more alarming picture of systemic neglect, exploitation, and denial of basic rights. While there are slight improvements in movement liberty and payment fulfilment, the denial of education, awareness, healthcare, and freedom from debt remains entrenched.

This isn’t just a labour issue — it’s a human rights emergency.

Urgent actions required:

  • Mass-scale rights education

  • Crackdown on bonded labour and informal recruitment

  • Provision of basic facilities (food, water, healthcare)

  • Monitoring of abuse, threats, and salary practices

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Bahifazat Team

Bahifazat is a humanitarian initiative dedicated to eradicating human trafficking in Pakistan. Supported by law enforcement agencies and community partners, our platform leverages technology and public outreach to raise awareness, support victims, and empower citizens to report exploitation safely and anonymously.

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