Showing posts with label Child labour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Child labour. Show all posts

Thursday, 17 July 2014

Child labour is thriving in these 6 countries

The following information was abstracted from: Child labour is thriving in 6 countries

There are six countries where child labor is particularly prevalent. These examples come from the 2014 Child Labour Index published by Maplecroft, a global risk consulting firm, and reflect two major trends responsible for governments failing to tackle the worst forms of child labor: insecurity created through poverty and war, and economies where child labor is a product of state-sponsored programs.

Eritrea
Children from grades nine through 11 are conscripted into the workforce and forced to work two months every summer building roads and buildings on behalf of the state. Moreover, the government recruits children under the age of 18 for mandatory military service that doubles as a work program. According to reports from the U.S. Department of Labor and Human Rights Watch, military conscripts are used as forced laborers at Bisha, the country's largest gold mine.

Somalia
With over two decades of civil war and endemic poverty, many Somali children are part of the country's informal workforce. All too often, that work is soldiering.

North Korea
While little data on child labor in North Korea is available to outsiders, defector testimonies describe extensive use of the practice. Forced labor has become a structural necessity for North Korea's closed economy, frequently forcing children into the workforce.

Myanmar
Since winning independence from the United Kingdom nearly seven decades ago, Myanmar has been wracked by a series of internal conflicts, which have in turn contributed to the use of child labor. But with Myanmar gradually transitioning toward democratic rule, the government has begun to make commitments toward combating child labor. However, progress has been slow. "Due to a combination of desperate poverty and a history of conflict, child labor is now a pillar of Myanmar's economy.

Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan has become internationally infamous for state-sponsored forced labor in the cotton industry. The annual cotton harvest is integral to the Central Asian country's economy and is estimated to supply around 10 percent of the global supply of the fiber. Human Rights Watch estimates that every year the government forces more than a million of its 29 million citizens, both adults and children, to work in the cotton fields. The government shuts down schools and workplaces in order for its citizens to pick cotton.

Afghanistan
Despite nearly 13 years of American military occupation and untold billions in development assistance, child labor remains endemic in Afghanistan. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, children as young as six can be found working in brick-making, carpet-weaving, mining, and construction. As in the factories of the Industrial Revolution, children are often used for the most dangerous tasks and are at high risk of being killed or maimed in mines or construction sites.




Tuesday, 15 July 2014

12 million children work in Pakistan

Poverty has forced more than 12 million children to involve in child labour. According to Pakistan Bureau Statistics Labour Force Survey, almost 4.4 percent of children between the age group of 10 and 15 years are the part of country's active labour force.



Seven-year-old boy Salman Hussain cries while crouching on a pavement to scrub motorbikes, his job for nine hours a day, six days a week. "I want to study and become an engineer but we don't have any money"

Please read full story here: Child labour in Pakistan



So heartbreaking when I read that!  My neighbour's son, who is also seven, has his parents and domestic maid catering to all his whims and fancies,while Salman Hussain has to work 9 hours a day.  




Friday, 31 January 2014

10 places where child labor is most prevalent

A new report by risk analysis firm Maplecroft, which ranks 197 countries, identifies Eritrea, Somalia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Myanmar, Sudan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Zimbabwe and Yemen as the 10 places where child labor is most prevalent.

Countries with high poverty rates fare badly in the index due to the need for children to supplement their family income, the report said, but economically important countries like China, India, Russia and Brazil were also found to have extreme risks because child labor laws are often poorly enforced.



Sunday, 19 January 2014

Children in slavery!

Despite the fact that many people believe that slavery no longer exists, the International Labour Organization (ILO) estimated that there are some 8.4 million children in slavery or practices similar to slavery (ILO,2002).

They are all in child slavery, as defined by the 1956 UN Supplementary Slavery Convention.  In these cases, as well as being in a hazardous situation, there is an intention to exploit these children for someone else’s gain. This group of children includes:

  • Children who are used by others who profit from them, often through violence, abuse and threats, in prostitution or pornography , illicit activities, such as forced begging, petty theft, and the drug trade;
  • Forced child labour, for example in agriculture, factories, construction, brick kilns, mines, bars, restaurants or tourists environment
  • Children who are forced to take part in armed conflict. They don't only include child soldiers but also porters or girls taken as “wives” for soldiers and militia members. There are about 300,000 child soldiers involved in over 30 areas of conflict worldwide, some even younger than 10 years old. Children involved in conflict are severely affected by their experiences and can suffer from long-term trauma.
  • Child domestic workers, many of whom are forced to work long hours, in hazardous and often abusive environments, for little or no pay, and often far from home
Source: child_labour

Saturday, 27 July 2013

Children as young as five work in the mines!

While Jharkhand is mineral-rich, a majority of its people are dirt poor. In India, 28 million children work to supplement their families' meager income. At least 400,000 children between the ages of five and 14 work in Jharkhand, many in the coal mines. Illegal coal mining by children is tragic daily routine in Jharkhand.

Source: Children as young as 5 work in the mines!

Friday, 5 April 2013

Saroja is fighting child labour in Karnataka's silk industries


Real hero Saroja amma is fighting child labour in Karnataka's silk industries. According to the Census 2011, 12.6 million children work as labourers in India. India has the highest number of child labourers in the world, according to UNICEF.

In the silk twisting units of Magadi, thousands of children are put to work for their nimble fingers. They toil away for long hours, their frail bodies bent over in low-lit factories.  Saroja organised raids and rescued over 1200 children between 1999 and 2005.

May God bless her!

Sunday, 31 March 2013

Iqbal, one of over 250 million child labourers worldwide

Do you know?

 
About 250 million children between the ages of 5 and 14 work either full time or part time.
Almost half, some 120 million, work full-time, every day, all year round.
61 per cent of them live in Asia, 32 per cent in Africa and 7 per cent in Latin America

The story of Iqbal Masih
Iqbal was only four when he was sold into slavery. He was a child of bondage, sold by his family to pay for a debt. Though very small and very weak, he was forced to work at a carpet factory for 12 hours a day. He was constantly beaten, verbally abused and chained to his loom for six years. Severe malnutrition and years of cramped immobility in front of a loom stunted his growth.
 
All this changed in 1992, when Iqbal and some of his friends from the carpet factory stole away to attend a freedom day celebration organized by a group working to help end bonded labour. With their help, Iqbal, too, became free and soon became a well-known critic of child labour. His campaign scared many, especially those who used children as bonded labour. In December 1994, Iqbal visited the United States to receive a human rights award. Soon after his return, Iqbal was  killed by a gunman hired by factory owners.

Iqbal was just one of over 250 million child labourers worldwide, but his story has inspired many to act for change.

Source: http://www.un.org/cyberschoolbus/briefing/labour/labour.pdf
 

Pictures from:





Wednesday, 6 March 2013

Two million children world-wide, working themselves almost to death, just to feed our insatiable chocolate habits

World Vision, a worldwide non-profit organization said that “95% of chocolate is not certified free of child or forced labour”. Children as young as 8 can be sold or even forced into slavery by local ‘agents’, working on behalf of the corporate ‘Barons of Chocolate’; specifically, in order to recruit the cheapest of workers for their cocoa plantations. Over worked, and severely under paid; these children quite easily and secretly become, nameless, faceless, child labourers, used and abused for the sole purpose of increasing the global chocolate profits!
Information and photoraph reproduced from http://www.greenerideal.com/lifestyle/0225-chocolate-wars-tale-of-greed-child-slavery/