India’s rise as the world’s fourth-largest economy is being loudly celebrated. Yet little is said about where the toiling millions—especially workers and farmers—stand in this narrative of growth. The drumbeat of economic triumph rings hollow when reports emerge of workers dying in factories and farmers losing their lives in the fields. Even the deaths of workers rarely make headlines unless a catastrophe is too large to ignore.
On 16 February, two major industrial accidents were reported from the National Capital Region (NCR). The first occurred in Bhiwadi, Rajasthan, where 7–8 workers were burned to death. By evening, news came from Faridabad, Haryana, that 40–50 workers had suffered severe burn injuries in another fire. Ironically, these tragedies unfolded on the same day that an AI Impact Summit commenced in the national capital, attended by the Prime Minister and global dignitaries to showcase India’s technological promise. Amid the celebration of “golden dreams,” the cries of workers were drowned out. Those who invoke the slogan Shramev Jayate—“Labour Alone Triumphs”—may offer condolences, but concrete measures to prevent recurring industrial disasters remain conspicuously absent.
On 22 January 2026, six workers died and five were seriously injured in an explosion at a steel plant in Baloda Bazar, Chhattisgarh. All the deceased were from Bihar’s Gaya district; their bodies were so badly charred that identification was difficult. On the morning of 16 February 2026, a fire broke out at Plot G-1-118B in the Khushkhera Industrial Area of Bhiwadi, killing 7–8 workers and injuring more than five others. The remains of the dead were reduced to bones that had to be packed in plastic bags. Later that day, a massive blaze at Shiv Steel and Kalka Lubricant Workshop in Faridabad’s Sector-24 industrial area injured more than 40 workers and several firefighters; two succumbed to their injuries by 19 February at Safdarjung Hospital in Delhi. A day earlier, on 15 February 2026, two workers were killed and four seriously injured in a chemical factory explosion in Karkette village, Mandya district, Karnataka. They too were migrants from Bihar.
In many such industrial accidents, migrant workers from Bihar figure prominently. Migration was a central issue in the Bihar Assembly elections, prompting promises of job creation within the state so that people would not be forced to leave home. Yet the exodus continues, and so do the fatalities.
A glance at official data raises troubling questions. Government records show that between 2012 and 2022, annual worker deaths in registered factories ranged from 1,317 to 1,017. Meanwhile, reported injuries dramatically declined from 28,700 in 2012 to just 2,714 in 2022—a drop that appears implausible given the visible rise in accidents across both formal and informal sectors since 2020. The discrepancy suggests underreporting rather than genuine improvement.
Administrative Apathy and Regulatory Dilution
Industrial audits have effectively been abandoned. Under the four new labour codes, labour inspectors have been redesignated as “facilitators,” allowed to enter factories only with prior notice and company consent. This change amounts to granting employers sweeping discretion and weakens oversight.
The Bhiwadi fire is illustrative. The factory where the blaze occurred was officially registered as a garment unit but was allegedly operating illegally as a fireworks manufacturing facility after being declared closed on paper. Workers were reportedly locked inside during production, and some even lived on the premises—evidenced by sacks of potatoes found inside. According to fire officials, the factory stored large quantities of cardboard and explosives, prolonging firefighting efforts for hours.
In late December 2024, authorities uncovered a Rs 60 crore illegal drug manufacturing unit in Bhiwadi’s Kaharani industrial area, raising serious questions about local administrative vigilance. Officials promised inspections of factories within 15 days. Yet barely two months later, another illegal unit claimed eight lives. Only after the tragedy did further raids uncover two more illicit fireworks factories in the same industrial zone.
The Bhiwadi Paradox
Bhiwadi’s transformation has been dramatic. Once a small rural settlement of 1,624 people in 1971, it grew to over 100,000 by 2011, with an estimated 350,000 migrant workers today. Under the Greater Bhiwadi Master Plan 2031, the projected population is 1.5 million. Rapid industrialization has brought more than 6,500 registered industrial units, including major manufacturing firms from Japan, South Korea and France. According to the Bhiwadi Integrated Industries Association, the town generates annual revenues of around Rs 17,000 crore.
Yet Bhiwadi was ranked the world’s most polluted city in 2021 by IQAir. Stagnant industrial effluents, garbage heaps and encroached roads present a stark contrast to its image as Rajasthan’s second-largest industrial hub.
Generous government incentives—input tax credits, stamp duty exemptions, electricity concessions, capital and interest subsidies—have encouraged companies to set up or relocate operations there. Thousands of units have moved from Delhi since the late 1990s, often benefiting from subsidies meant to promote employment generation. However, real job creation and worker welfare have lagged behind corporate gains.
Minimum wages in Rajasthan range between Rs 8,000 and 10,000 per month, significantly lower than Delhi’s Rs 18,000–22,000. Despite a swelling workforce, public investment in education and healthcare remains inadequate. Workers must rely on private schools and, in emergencies, travel to Delhi for advanced medical treatment—an indictment of local infrastructure.
Beyond “Accidents”: A Structural Crisis
Industrial disasters in Bhiwadi, Faridabad, Karnataka or elsewhere are not isolated mishaps; they reflect systemic failures—illegal operations, lax enforcement, administrative complicity and exploitative labour practices. After every tragedy, relief is announced, compensation distributed and inquiries ordered. Rarely are those responsible held fully accountable. Transfers of officials substitute for penalties, and public condolences replace structural reform.
The need of the hour is clear: ensure fair wages, enforce stringent safety standards, provide universal social security, and revisit labour codes perceived as weakening worker protections. Dialogue with workers’ representatives must translate into enforceable laws. Education and healthcare for workers’ families should be accessible and affordable. Extending lifelong medical coverage under the Employees’ State Insurance (ESI) scheme—even after retirement—would acknowledge the heightened health needs of aging workers.
Until systemic change occurs, the celebratory rhetoric of economic ascent will remain shadowed by the grim reality of charred factories and grieving families. How long will the nation continue to fill corporate coffers over workers’ coffins? How long will the bones of the labouring poor be counted as collateral in the march toward growth?
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