Q. The Overseas Mobility (Facilitation and Welfare) Bill, 2025 seeks to reform India’s emigration framework in an era of rising overseas labour migration. Critically analyse whether the Bill adequately protects the rights and welfare of Indian migrant workers. (10 Marks, 150 Words)

Core Demand of the Question

  • Adequate Protection of Migrant Rights
  • Associated Concerns
  • Measures to Minimize Concerns

Answer

Introduction

The Overseas Mobility (Facilitation and Welfare) Bill, 2025 aims to replace the four-decade-old Emigration Act of 1983. Amidst record-breaking remittances ($125 billion in 2023), the Bill shifts India’s focus from mere “regulation” to “facilitating” orderly migration through a modern, data-driven, and institutionalized framework.

Body

Adequate Protection of Migrant Rights

  • Institutional Support System: Establishes the Overseas Mobility and Welfare Council for inter-ministerial convergence to manage policies effectively.
    Eg: The Council will coordinate welfare schemes across Ministries to ensure a “Whole of Government” approach to migration.
  • Safe Mobility Framework: Proposes an Emigrant Worker Registry interoperable with foreign wage-protection systems to prevent financial exploitation.
  • Mandatory Welfare Insurance: Introduces a compulsory insurance cover of ₹10 lakh for all ECR-category workers to provide a safety net.
    Eg: This insurance will cover accidental death, disability, and emergency repatriation costs for blue-collar migrants.
  • Stiff Penalties for Fraud: Imposes fines up to ₹2 crore for unlicensed intermediaries to curb the menace of “visa factories” and illegal agents.
    Eg: These deterrents target the unregulated “middleman” network that often traps workers in debt bondage.

Associated Concerns

  • Dilution of Self-Advocacy: The Bill removes the right of migrants to directly initiate legal action against exploiters, making them dependent on state machinery.
  • Gender and Vulnerability Blindness: Specific safeguards for women and children are replaced by a vague “vulnerable classes” category, risking weak enforcement.
  • Opaque Recruitment Fees: The removal of mandatory fee disclosure requirements for agencies could exacerbate the risk of debt-funded migration.
  • Excessive Centralization: The exclusion of major migrant-sending states like Kerala and Bihar from the primary Council sidelines local expertise.
    Eg: State Nodal Committees, essential for ground-level grievance redressal, lack a strong mandate in the current draft.

Measures to Minimize Concerns

  • Restoring Legal Standing: Re-incorporating provisions that allow migrant workers to directly file complaints and seek time-bound judicial compensation.
    Eg: A “Fast-track Migration Tribunal” to resolve disputes without long bureaucratic delays.
  • Decentralized Governance: Mandatory inclusion of State government representatives and trade unions in the Overseas Mobility Council.
    Eg: Stakeholder consultations have called for a “Federal Migration Board” to handle regional specificities.
  • Explicit Anti-Trafficking Clauses: Defining “labour trafficking” clearly within the Bill to link violations to criminal law rather than just civil fines.
    Eg: Aligning the Bill with the UN Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons.
  • Comprehensive Reintegration Support: Allocating dedicated funds for the skilling and trauma counseling of returning migrants, including those deported early.
    Eg: Successful models like Kerala’s ‘NORKA’ should be scaled nationally to support “distress returnees.”

Conclusion

While the Bill modernizes procedures, it must transition from “facilitation” to “fortification” of rights. A truly “Viksit” migration framework requires balancing economic diplomacy with human dignity. Ensuring the Bill remains worker-centric, federal, and legally enforceable will determine if it acts as a protective shield or merely a bureaucratic turnstile for India’s global workforce.

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UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध

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