Rai, 45, and his three sons - two adults and one teenager - now spend their days scavenging for scraps of the valued mineral used to put the sparkle into make-up and car paint and in electronics to sell to local traders in eastern Jharkhand state.
But as the pandemic drives more families to mica, residents, researchers and campaigners have voiced concerns over failings by the government and private sector to regulate the often fatal trade sourced from abandoned mines and to create other jobs.
An expose in 2016 found children dying in derelict mines in three states with families paid blood money to stay silent, prompting vows by brands to clean up supply chains and authorities to legalize and regulate mica.
Rai said his job as a hostel cleaner paid 5,000 rupees ($68) monthly but now he was fortunate to make 50 rupees a day selling mica gathered outside mines shuttered in the 1980s amid laws to limit deforestation and as alternatives to natural mica emerged. I reached home with great difficulty but there was no other work here, said Rai, who cycled 2,000 km (1,240 miles) over 10 days to return to his village in Giridih, joining the ranks of millions of workers who headed home when COVID-19 struck India. Mica is our only hope to survive ... I just want to be allowed to pick mica, he said by phone from his mud hut in a region where even the roadside soil glitters with the mineral.
Jharkhand's state government said action was underway to legalize the sector but progress had been slower than hoped.
K. Srinivasan, secretary in the Department of Mines and Geology, said a new policy was in the pipeline to initiate mica mining legally in Jharkhand and ensure jobs. We genuinely want to solve the problem, he said.
India is one of the world's top producers of mica.
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