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Mulenga Links
Child Labour to Poverty |
Poverty
is the main cause of the increase in child
labour, 17-year-old Rabecca Mulenga has
said.
And United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)
country representative Dr Stella Goings
said child labour was a global problem,
which required immediate attention.
In an interview, in commemoration of the
World Day Against Child Labour, which
fell yesterday, Rabecca said most children
were forced into labour due to poor standards
of living in the country.
Rabecca said some children were orphaned
and had to engage in work to fend for
their families.
"Child labour is a big problem in
Zambia. It is harmful to children's health.
Poverty forces many children to work in
order to survive. HIV and AIDS also leave
children orphaned and they end up heading
households. This entails children taking
the lead through all sorts of jobs,"
she said.
Rabecca said there was need to sensitise
parents on the dangers of child labour,
as some were ignorant on the effects of
engaging children in labour.
She said parents had to instil good values
in their children and to invest in their
education.
"If children are the future leaders
then there is need to take them to school.
Zambia will only develop if future leaders
are educated," she said.
And Dr Goings said the increase in economic
challenges had in most cases forced families
to engage their children in labour.
Dr Goings said most children had been
robbed of their childhood by engaging
in work.
"Child labour in Zambia is driven
by poverty. UNICEF estimates that out
of 2.2 billion children in the world,
about one billion lose their childhood
early due to labour. Economic challenges
have led to the increase in the number
of children engaging in labour. HIV and
AIDS has also increased the number of
orphans further compounding the problem.
These orphaned children are subjected
to hazardous works such as stone crashing
and working on farms," Dr Goings
said.
"Poverty has also led to an increase
in human suffering and families are in
most cases left with no choice but to
send their children to work because it
is an issue of survival."
Dr Goings said there was need to provide
children an opportunity to go to school.
She hailed government for its efforts
in promoting a decent living for children
by discouraging child labour.
"We need to protect children from
hazardous situations. We need to give
them the right to be children. Children
have a right to leisure, education, security
and health. Communities should also take
a leading role in taking care of children,
they should be aware of what is happening
to children. It is not entirely up to
the government to stop child labour,"
she said.
http://allafrica.com/stories/200506131248.html
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Parliament Commemorates
Africa Union Day and World Day Against Child
Labour |
Women and Children's Affairs Minister,
Hajia Alima Mahama, has called on members
of parliament to contribute hundred thousand
cedis each, to support the Neonatal intensive
care unit.
The unit has been formed for individual
and corporate institutions to contribute
to it and help mothers who cannot pay
for services rendered by the hospital
after they had given birth.
Hajia Mahama said this when she made a
statement in parliament to commemorate
African Union day of the African child.
The theme for the occasion is "The
African orphan, our collective responsibility".
She noted that orphans are vulnerable
children who find themselves as a marginalized
group in society, a situation which has
been made worse by the increase in the
HIV/AIDS pandemic.
She stated that it is estimated that in
Africa, there are about 12 million orphans
as a result of parents dying from AIDS
and 16% of the orphans are under 6 years
of age, adding that though Ghana is considered
as one of the countries with relatively
low prevalence compared to other countries,
the pandemic has orphaned over 200,000
children in the country.
The minister who is also the MP for Nalerigu/Gambaga
said Ghanaian communities have traditionally
absorbed orphans within the extended family
system but the trend has over the years
reduced, due to the breakdown of the extended
family system.
She mentioned that stigmatization and
discrimination against persons with HIV/AIDS
on the part of society has contributed
to extended families shirking their traditional
responsibilities of care and support for
orphans. She said women, as always in
crisis situations,are rising up to the
occasion, with their men behind them and
acknowledge the work of Queen Mothers
Associations in the country for adopting,
finding and placing orphans in families
in their communities as well as identifying
support packages for their care.
All the 1,035 are enrolled in school and
GAC is at this moment covering educational
requirements bills for 400. She entreated
all orphan homes also rendering services
throughout the country to enroll all the
children in schools because orphanages
are not necessarily schools on their own
and commended them for rendering this
service. "Orphanages should also
not be considered as businesses to reap
profits".
On her part, the deputy minister for manpower
development and employment, Akosua Frema
Osei Opare, said the term: "Child
Labour" does not encompass all economic
activity undertaken by children but rather,
refers to employment or work carried out
by children, that does not conform to
the provisions of national legislation,
the Children's Act and international instruments
such as the ILO Conventions 138 and 182,
which define the boundaries of work undertaken
by children that must be targeted for
abolition.
She said the Children's Act defines exploitative
Labour as work that deprives the child
of his/her health, education or development.
It sets the minimum age for admission
to employment at 15 years for general
employment, 13 years for light work, and
18 years for hazardous work.
The Act she said, defines hazardous work
as work posing "a danger to the health,
safety or morals of a person", and
provides an in-exhaustive list including
sea-going, mining and quarrying, porterage
of heavy loads, work involving the production
or use of chemicals, and work in places
where there is a risk of exposure to immoral
behaviour.
She explained that as the Ghana Poverty
Reduction Strategy (GPRS) documents points
out, child labour is a national problem,
not only because it contributes to children
dropping out of school, but also because
by keeping children out of school, it
breeds another cycle of people who would
most likely end up in poverty later.
And the fact that child labour interferes
with education has significant implication
for social and economic development at
individual household and societal levels.
She noted that government, on its part,
has over the years, taken adequate steps
through legislation, policies and other
initiatives to protect the rights of children
and promote their well-being.
Mrs. Osei Opare who is also the member
for Ayawaso West Wuogon, disclosed that
the Ministry of Manpower, Youth and Employment
through the Child Unit and the Department
of Social Welfare is collaborating with
the ILO to monitor child labour in selected
districts as part of a process of eliminating
the practice in Ghana.
She appealed to all Ghanaians, religious
leaders, chiefs, queen mothers and mps
to help in various ways to eliminate this
practice and provide a better future for
our children.
For, as the writer of a song says, IT
TAKES A VILLAGE TO RAISE A CHILD Contributing
to the statement, the MP for North Dayi,
Akua Dansua said as the African union
recognizes African children as future
leaders, they should do all in their power
to assist them. She urged African leaders
to use the occasion of Africa day to end
the senseless wars and resource institutions
that are responsible for the welfare of
child orphans.
The MP for Builsa North, Agnes Chigabatia,
suggested that irresponsible parents be
punished by making them face the full
rigors of the law.
http://allafrica.com/stories/200506170889.html
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Northern Region
celebrates World Day Against Child Labour |
Mr Nelson Sulemana Nyadia, Livelihoods
and Advocacy Manager of Regional Advisory
Information and Network Systems (RAINS)/Campaign
for Female Education, a non-governmental
organisation dedicated to providing humanitarian
services to communities has called local
communities, district assemblies and development
agencies to curb the menace of child labour.
He said despite education to eliminate
child labour and trafficking, policy makers
continue to grapple with the problem because
some community leaders and other stakeholders
had not committed themselves to fight
the menace.
Mr
Nyadia was addressing the chief and people
of Sagnerigu, a farming community near
Tamale, at the Northern Regional launch
of the World Day Against Child Labour
(WDACL) at the weekend. The occasion was
meant to sensitise the public on the dangers
involved in engaging children in hazardous
work and how chiefs and other community
leaders in the area could assist to eliminate
child labour from the region.
RAINS/CAMFED
organized the forum with sponsorship from
International Labour Organization (ILO)/International
Programme on the Elimination of Child
Labour (IPEC) as a means of fighting child
labour issues particularly from the quarries.
Mr Nyadia said more than 2,000 children
were engaged in child labour in the three
northern regions with large numbers in
the quarries and surface mining communities
of the Upper East Region and called on
district assemblies to commit themselves
to the fight against it.
Mr
Iddrisu Dajia, the Northern Regional Commissioner
of the Commission on Human Rights and
Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), said it
was important for child rights advocates
to use enough forums to educate the public
about the rights of children especially
to education and the need to avoid engaging
children in exploitative labour. He said
child molestation issues in the Northern
Region was as a result of the negligence
of some parents to educate their children
and the love for material gain and called
for a change in the trend.
Mr
Dajia said it was sad that Ghana was the
first in the sub-Saharan region to ratify
the UN Convention on the Rights of the
Child but could not fight child rights
issues in the country. He appealed to
the public to continue to regard children
as the greatest resource of the nation
and take good care of them to grow into
good adults to develop the country.
The
Sagnarigu Naa, Dr. Andani Andam in a speech
read on his behalf, expressed worry that
some people in the Northern Region always
use poverty as a basis for not enrolling
their children in school and advised the
communities to send their children to
school. He expressed concern about shepherd
boys and stressed the need to withdraw
them from the bush and enrol them in schools
to ensure that no one was left out of
the educational race. Dr Andam said child
rights abuse cases were rampant in Sagnerigu
and that the launch would change the people's
attitude towards child molestation particularly
child trafficking, shepherding and the
Kayayee (porters) phenomenon.
http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/artikel.php?ID=84130
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Wal-Mart has
repeatedly violated child labour law in
Connecticut |
"We
are going to vigorously pursue this"
says State Attorney General The authorities
in the U.S. State of Connecticut have
uncovered proof of 11 child labour law
violations in three different Wal-Mart
stores. They concern young workers using
heavy machinery such as equipment to crush
cardboard. Young workers have also illegally
been made to work late at night, after
the 22.00 deadline set by law.
In February this year, Wal-Mart was fined
USD 135,540 to settle federal child-labor
charges. In that connection, a sweetheart
deal between the Bush administration and
the Bentonville-based multinational was
discovered, which gave the company a two
week advance warning before workplaces
were inspected.
Commented on the latest child labour bust,
Rich Harris, a spokesman for Connecticut
governor M. Jodi Rell, said to NBC 30
News that it's "worth considering
toughening the fines" against employers
that "wilfully and repeatedly"
violate child labour laws.
Richard Blumenthal, Connecticut Attorney
General, has been strongly critical of
the deal between Wal-Mart and the U.S.
Labor Department. He promised that the
state athorities will now vigorously pursue
Wal-Marts labour law violations to the
end.
http://www.union-network.org/unicommerce.nsf/0/C17E849A56B8C30BC125702600471
D31?OpenDocument
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VSO-Rwanda in
Global Education Campaign |
Volunteer Services Overseas VSO- Rwanda
and the Ministry of Education have joined
the Global Education Campaign (GCE) in
order to achieve the education objectives
in the Millennium Development Goals (MDG's)
by the year 2015.
This was during the annual celebrations
to mark the Day of the African Child,
on the 16th of June, at St. André
Secondary school in Nyamirambo, Kigali.
The theme of the campaign was "send
my friend to school"
"Over 3000 messages from Rwanda's
school children will be sent to leaders
of the G8 summit which is due in the first
week of July to remind them of their promise
to implement the education for all in
the MDG's by the year 2015," Phil
Hudson the Country Director VSO, said.
He also added that the messages will be
accompanied by signed pledges by Government
representatives and various key players
in the education sector in Rwanda, including
UNICEF who are to be presented at the
summit.
Hudson revealed that US$5.2 billion was
needed to implement education strategies
in Africa, yet twice the amount is used
in the West on wars and ice-cream.
"This money is nothing to the Western
World but meaningful to us here. There
is need to share resources and watch leaders
live to their promises," he recalled.
In a report to the G8 "friends",
it is estimated that only one in two African
children gets primary school education
while 22million African girls do not attend
school at all.
Students at St. André portrayed
the situation of the African child as
alarming especially for the girl child
through the play "Mureke inshuti
yanje yige" (Send my friend to school)
"There is need to send girls to school,
because they are future leaders too. Though
poverty is the main problem in Africa,
we call upon world leaders and parents
to send children to school," Allan
Mizero, a students leader said.
"Day of the African child" started
in 1976, when Soweto children in South
Africa were brutally murdered by the former
Apartheid regime after a demonstration
on rights to education.
http://allafrica.com/stories/200506200994.html
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Trafficking
of persons and child care protection |
YOUNG PEOPLE LAW
The
matter of the trafficking in persons in
Jamaica has been in the news recently,
following the report by the United States
of America that Jamaica has been downgraded
from the 2004 assessment of being ranked
at Tier 2 in human trafficking to now
being ranked at Tier 3, which is the lowest
level of the three-tier system. A possible
consequence of this "demotion"
is the suspension for a year of economic
aid from the United States of America
as well as from international financial
institutions such as the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank
to Jamaica.
On a positive note however, the resulting
discussions have increased the public's
awareness of human trafficking and provides
an opportunity to garner the energies
of the wider society in providing possible
solutions to this problem.
What is the meaning of trafficking in
persons? Are we aware of the implications
for children?
It
is therefore necessary for us to firstly,
examine whether children can be victims
of such trafficking and secondly what,
if any protection our laws accord to our
children.
Trafficking in Persons includes:
the movement or recruiting of persons
by the use of threat, force, fraud, deception,
abuse of power or as a consequence the
vulnerability of the person being moved
or recruited. It also includes the giving
or receipt of payment in order to have
control over the person being moved/ recruited
where the purpose of the movement/recruitment
of the individual is for the purpose of
the exploitation of that person. Additionally,
the selling of children is a form of trafficking.
A child defined in section 2 of the Child
Care and Protection Act, 2004 as "a
person under the age of eighteen years",
is protected from trafficking by this
Act.
Section 10 of the Child Care and Protection
Act expressly provides that "no person
shall sell or participate in the trafficking
of any child". This means that trafficking
in children is against the law.
Further, the penalty for this offence
is quite serious. Any person who is convicted
of this offence faces the possibility
of a term of imprisonment at hard labour
for a period of up to 10 years as well
as the possibility of being fined.
It can be argued that poverty and inadequate
economic opportunities are factors that
take children away from the protection
and security of their homes and families,
into the urban centres, into night clubs,
onto the street, at the stoplights, selling
and begging, thereby increasing their
vulnerability to incidence of trafficking.
To what extent does the law offer protection
to our children against these activities
and ultimately, the reduction of the likelihood
of our children being targets?
Firstly, except where specifically permitted
by the Minister of Labour, it is illegal
to employ children under the age of 13
years.
Section
33 of the Child Care and Protection Act
provides that "No person shall employ
a child under the age of thirteen years
in the performance of any work.
Further, more extensive protection is
accorded by section 34 of this Act which
expressly provides that "No person
shall employ a child (a) in the performance
of any work that is likely to be hazardous
or to interfere with the child's education
or to be harmful to the child's health
or physical, mental, spiritual or social
development or, (b) in night work or an
industrial undertaking.
A person who is convicted of acting in
breach of sections 33 and 34 of the Act
faces the possibility of a maximum penalty
of being fined up to $500, 000 as well
as being imprisoned for a term of up to
six months.
The law (Child Care and Protection Act
section 39) also expressly specifies that
it is an offence to employ a child in
a nightclub or to use a child for any
conduct that is indecent or immoral.
A person who is convicted of this offence
faces the possibility of being fined up
to $1 m or a term of imprisonment of up
to one year.
It is also an offence to allow or cause
a child to beg.
Apart from the Child Care and Protection
Act, the Offences Against the Persons
Act specifies the offence of Carnal Abuse,
which is having sexual intercourse with
a girl who is under the age of 16 years.
It is therefore reasonable to conclude
that the law firstly recognises the possibility
of children being victims of human trafficking
and additionally, has safeguards for the
protection of our children. Not only in
the express statement of the law against
"trafficking" but also through
the other provisions including that against,
child labour, sexual exploitation and
begging.
However, the law cannot operate in isolation
and the responsibility of protecting our
children undoubtedly lies in the collective
efforts of all, after all our children
are tomorrow's people.
Thalia Maragh is an Attorney at law, Independent
Jamaica Council for Human Rights, 131
Tower Street, Kingston
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/magazines/TeenAge/html/20050620T200000-0500_82775_OBS_TRAFFICKING_OF_PERSONS_AND_CHILD_CARE_PROTECTION.asp
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Bangladesh rally
demands end to child labour |
Dhaka, June. 12 (AP): Hundreds of underage
workers who toil in the sweatshops of
Bangladesh's tannery, welding and chemical
industries rallied in the impoverished
nation's capital on Sunday to demand an
end to child labour, organizers said.
Clad in red T-shirts, they carried banners
and placards that read ``Adults will work,
children will go to school'' and ``We
want child-labour-free Bangladesh'', in
commemoration of the World Day against
Child Labour.
About five million Bangladeshi children
aged 5-17 work to support their families,
according to the U.N.'s International
Labour Organization.
One of them is Nazmin Akter, 10, who has
been working at a plastic manufacturing
factory in Dhaka for six months to support
her parents who live at a slum. Akter
has no weekly holiday and works at least
10 hours a day, earning just 250 takas
(US$4) a month.
The owner of the factory or her senior
male colleagues sometimes beat her if
she makes a mistake.
``I hate to work, but I do that just to
help my parents,'' Akter told The Associated
Press at the rally. Her mother works as
a maid and her father pedals a rickshaw
on the streets of Dhaka, a city of 10
million people.
Now, Akter studies for two hours each
day at a center run by Ahsania Mission,
a Bangladeshi charity organization that
organized Sunday's rally with the support
of the International Labour Organization.
Akter attends the school in the morning
before going to work.
``I don't want to work in this factory
in future, I want to study in high school,''
Akter said.
Ahsania Mission works to get employers
to send their child workers to the school
and make factory work safer. It also encourages
parents to send their children to school
instead of work.
``We are trying to bring a change, but
it's really difficult to be successful
here,'' Asma Begum, a teacher of the mission's
non-formal school, said, adding poverty
is the main reason for such a dreadful
situation. ``Still, the situation has
improved substantially,'' she said.
``Our first mission is to eliminate hazardous
environments at work places,'' Mahbub
Morshed, who mobilizes employers to improve
work environment, said at the rally. ``Child
labour in Bangladesh is a reality, but
we want to eliminate it,'' Morshed conceded.
Children in Bangladesh are engaged in
about 430 forms of child labour, of which
67 forms are hazardous and dangerous for
children, according to United Nations
Children's Fund.
Morshed said about 1.2 million children
are engaged in hazardous work in tobacco,
tanneries or chemical factories and welding
workshops.
Shampa Khatun, 8, who also attended Sunday's
rally, said she worked at a tannery factory
for six hours daily with her mother.
``I wash leathers with chemicals,'' Khatun,
who earns takas 150 (US$2.5) a week, said,
showing her wounds in hands. She said
she does not use any gloves at the factory
she works.
``I have sent her to work as my husband
is unable to work due to his illness,''
Khatun's mother Rani Begum, said after
the rally. ``What can I do with my sick
husband without sending her to work?''
Mohammed Yunus, an owner of a car repair
workshop, told The Associated Press that
he had improved the work environment of
his workshop after understanding the significance
of child rights issue.
``But, it's not enough. I have still many
things to do,'' Yunus said. Four children
are employed in his workshop, he said.
http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/003200506121528.htm
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Eliminating
the scourge in the Caribbean's top offenders |
Monday,
June 13th 2005
Leslie Bowrin, International Labour Organisation
(ILO) Regional Child Labour Project Manager,
who was delivering remarks at Friday morning's
launch of the public display for the World
Day Against Child Labour on the Brian
Lara Promenade, would go on to reveal
some hideous truths about child labour
-a well-kept secret of the Caribbean region.
"Children have been found to be engaged
in urban street work, such as vending,
loading, transporting, begging, engaged
in agricultural activities using hazardous
materials and exposed to harsh elements,
found scavenging on landfill sites, being
exploited for illicit activity, whether
for commercial sexual activity or the
drug trade, and exploited as domestic
servants," said Bowrin, referencing
the ILO's pioneering child labour research
in seven Caribbean territories.
The downtown Port of Spain event was part
of the World Day Against Child Labour,
established in 2002 to highlight the global
movement to eliminate the practice of
child labour, particularly in its worst
forms.
A press release dispatched from the ILO's
Sub-regional Office for the Caribbean
to all major Caribbean media houses, supports
Bowrin's statement. According to the release,
rapid assessment studies done by the ILO
in 2001 and 2002 in Belize, Barbados,
Bahamas, Jamaica, Guyana, Suriname and
Trinidad and Tobago revealed the worst
forms of child labour. Other than national
surveys done in Belize and Jamaica, the
release conceded, there were no studies
effectively quantifying the magnitude
of child labour in the region.
"While there are no extensive statistics
on child labour in Trinidad and Tobago,
a rapid assessment study done by the ILO
in 2002 in particular occupational areas
reveals that there is in fact evidence
of what is regarded as the worst forms
of child labour in this country,"
said the Ministry of Labour and Small
and Micro-Enterprise Development representative
when his turn came to address the audience
on the Promenade.
The Labour Ministry has played a significant
role in the fight to eliminate and prevent
child labour in Trinidad. Shanmatee Singh,
Director of Research and Planning (Ag)
at the Labour Ministry chairs the Cabinet-appointed,
multi-sectoral National Committee for
the Prevention and Elimination of Child
Labour in Trinidad.
In other Caribbean territories, national
child labour committees have also been
established, comprising members of non-governmental
organisations, employers' and workers'
organisations, labour ministries and other
major social ministries such as education,
youth and health. The child labour committees
are charged with policy formation and
programme development toward the elimination
and prevention of child labour.
To date, twelve Caribbean member states
have ratified ILO Convention No. 182 on
the Worst Forms of Child Labour and ten
member states have ratified ILO Convention
No. 138 on the Minimum Age for Employment.
(See www.ilocarib.org.tt)
Here in Trinidad, the child labour Committee
has spearheaded the ongoing pilot rehabilitative
programmes in the Beetham, Forres Park
and Aripo landfills.
"The YMCA was contracted to work
with children on Beetham Estate to offer
them alternative options in terms of training
and counselling," explained Bowrin,
adding that the programme, which started
in the 2004 long vacation, targeted 40
children for direct withdrawal from child
labour and targeted a further 90 for prevention.
http://www.trinidadexpress.com/index.pl/article_features?id=83177245
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Senator urges
cocoa trade to act on child labour |
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. Senator Tom
Harkin says the cocoa industry must deliver
on its promise to wipe out forced child labour on farms in West Africa or face
legislative action.
"I hope the industry will do what
they said they were going to do. If not,
then I'm going to be looking at legislation,"
Harkin told Reuters. "It could be
anything from 'B' to 'T' — from
boycotts to tariffs."
Harkin, who spoke in a telephone interview
late on Wednesday, was a key force behind
the development of an industry-wide protocol
in 2001 that aimed to eliminate forced
child labour on cocoa farms, particularly
in West Africa, the top growing region.
The
multibillion-dollar chocolate industry
has agreed to present lawmakers with a
plan to implement a monitoring and certification
system by July 1. The industry has repeatedly
said that it is on target to meet that
deadline.
Harkin,
a Democrat from Iowa, said he planned
to meet with representatives of the chocolate
industry on June 21.
"I
would like to hear from them what they
promised. That is, a timeline with detailed
descriptions of how they are going to
put in place a monitoring system, how
they are going to put in place a system
for social rehabilitation for these children,
and a certification (scheme)," he
said.
The
Harkin-Engel Protocol, named after Harkin
and Rep. Eliot Engel of New York, also
a Democrat, was developed in response
to reports of child and slave labor conditions
in West Africa's cocoa industry.
A
2002 survey by the International Institute
for Tropical Agriculture showed an estimated
284,000 children worked in hazardous conditions
on cocoa farms in Ivory Coast, Ghana,
Cameroon, Guinea and Nigeria.
Hundreds
of thousands of small family farms under
12 acres in West Africa provide more than
70 percent of the world's cocoa crop.
Ivory Coast is the No. 1 cocoa producer.
U.S.
and European chocolate industry associations
signed the voluntary protocol, together
with U.S. and Ivory Coast governments,
international labor unions and several
nongovernmental organizations.
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory?id=833613
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Indian NGO rescues
children from slavery |
New
Delhi: Twenty Nine children, working in
inhuman conditions at a zari unit in Delhi
were released on 6th June 2005.
In
a massive crackdown on an industrial unit
in the congested Raghunagar, Dabri locality
of West Delhi, Bachpan Bachao Andolan
(BBA) under the leadership of Shri Kailash
Satyarthi rescued 29 children working
in exploitative conditions. This raid
was conducted on a complaint lodged by
8 year old Huaib Ansari, who had managed
to run away from the zari factory.
Huaib
complained that the zari contractor gave
him only one meal and used to beat him
often.
BBA
has been engaged in a drive against child
labour and inhuman working conditions
for last twenty five years. Most of the
rescued children were trafficked from
their villages in Sitamarhi district of
Bihar. The rescued children aged between
7 to 12 years were forced to work from
9:00 am in the morning till 3:30 am in
the night for as little as Rs. 40 per
month. For several months they had not
been outside the room where they were
living and working. They were locked in
2 rooms, less than 25 sq ft without adequate
food or medical attention. Most of the
children have developed skin allergies
due to crowding and lack of medical attention.
"I
have been working in zari industry for
months now; we get up early and start
working from 9 am to 3.30 am. We got food
twice a day: rice, dal and potatoes. I
was paid Rs 40 every month. I was not
allowed to go anywhere", says 8 year
old Insaif. Akbar Ansari, 9 years old
said, "Any time there was a small
mistake while embroidering, the owner
used to beat us mercilessly.
Nearly a year ago, Sagir alias Mullahji
(owner) had got me here, saying that I
would be sent to school in Delhi. We were
not given any new clothes on any of our
festivals, like Id, neither were we allowed
to do Namaz"
Thousands
of children slog in sweatshops like the
zari units in Delhi, mostly trafficked
from Bihar and neighbouring states. Most
parents are conned by traffickers who
promise that the children would lead a
better life with opportunities for education
in the cities. At the most conservative
estimate, there are around 50,000 children
between the 5 and 12 years of age, who
are bonded to the zari unit owners in
Delhi alone. These children work from
dawn to dusk, with little to look forward
to, with no money and education.
Kailash
Satyarthi, BBA Chairperson, says "The
main culprits are the principal employers
who should be tracked and convicted for
the illegal use of underage children,
in this case as well as in the recent
Mumbai raid. It is the responsibility
of the government to provide for the rehabilitation
and education of these children".
http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/112800/1/1893
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29 child workers
rescued in Delhi |
NEW
DELHI: Twenty-nine children working in
an embroider | | |