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

Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Hong Kong lags behind in the battle against modern-day slavery | South China Morning Post

"A saddening, yet familiar story hit the headlines late last month. Children below 16 were sent from the western province of Yunnan to be exploited in textile factories in the eastern city of Changshu, in Jiangsu province."
"As some experts point out, the issue is not child labour alone. The employers confiscate the children’s identity papers and do not pay wages until the end of the year, so as to prevent them from walking away from the job. This constitutes bonded labour, one of the many forms of forced labour."

Hong Kong lags behind in the battle against modern-day slavery | South China Morning Post:


Saturday, October 11, 2014

Nobel Peace Prize Boosts Battle to End Child Labor | Human Rights Watch


(New York) – The awarding of the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize to Indian child rights activist Kailash Satyarthi recognizes the hard fight against child labor and should serve as a call to address this challenge around the globe, Human Rights Watch said today. Satyarthi, 60, launched a campaign against employing children in the worst forms of labor both in India and elsewhere, and has built a movement to encourage businesses to employ ethical practices without child labor.

Continue here:
Nobel Peace Prize Boosts Battle to End Child Labor | Human Rights Watch:

Saturday, June 21, 2014

Coca Cola : Opinion: Social Protection is Essential to Combat Child Labor | 4-Traders

Source:  4-Traders

Simon Steyne is head of Social Dialogue and Partnerships in the International Labor Organization's International Program on the Elimination of Child Labor....

Many children work to earn money to go to school (even though working and going to school affects attendance and achievement). And when poor families, especially with insecure incomes, get hit by sudden shocks to their finances - for example, education costs, any medical costs, or the death or injury of a breadwinner - it can knock them sideways. That's often the first time a child - even a child in school - begins child labor to replace or fill the gap in an adult's income. Social protection ensures basic family incomes so children don't need to work to fill the gap. Social protection changes lives.


Read: 

http://www.4-traders.com/THE-COCA-COLA-COMPANY-4819/news/Coca-Cola--Opinion-Social-Protection-is-Essential-to-Combat-Child-Labor-18596750/

Monday, December 16, 2013

Child laborers get the chance to share their stories through writing and art. — The Good Men Project

Source:  The Good Men Project

One of the privileges of working on child labor issues is getting to know the stories of individual child workers who heroically struggle against poverty and the considerable odds that are stacked against them. Thanks to a wonderful annual essay and art contest held by the Association of Farmworker Opportunity Programs (AFOP), the management of the National Consumers League joins fellow leaders of the Child Labor Coalition (CLC) to serve as judges of the contest, through which we gain valuable insight into the plight of America’s most vulnerable young workers.

Continue:

http://goodmenproject.com/featured-content/cc-essay-contest-spotlights-the-plight-of-child-farmworkers-in-the-us/
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Sunday, November 3, 2013

Child Labor: Down by a Third Since 2000 | UNICEF FieldNotes

Source: UNICEF FieldNotes

 The number of child laborers worldwide has dropped significantly according to a new report released this week by the International Labor Organization (ILO), falling from 246 million in 2000 to 168 million in 2012. Child labor among girls is falling most quickly — by 40% compared to 25% for boys — and the greatest progress was made between 2008 and 2012. That’s a good sign; it shows that child labor can be reduced even during times of financial crisis.

Read more:
 http://fieldnotes.unicefusa.org/2013/09/child-labor-third-since-2000.html?utm_source=enews_110313A&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=usf
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Thursday, October 10, 2013

Vietnam's Trade of Underaged Species - NYTimes.com

Source: NYTimes.com

HO CHI MINH CITY — “It’s basic police work,” said Michael Brosowskidescribing his activities with the Blue Dragon Children’s Foundation, a nongovernmental agency that rescues children working in sweatshops in Vietnam. When it learns about a case of child labor, workers for the agency scout out suspected factories, snoop around posing as, say, electricians, and keep getaway cars on hand.

Continue: 
http://latitude.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/10/01/vietnams-trade-of-underaged-species/?src=recg
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Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Video: Fighting to Unravel India's Widespread Child Labor Abuses | Watch PBS NewsHour Online | PBS Video

Source: PBS NewsHour Online | PBS Video

  • Aired: 07/31/2013
  • 10:34
  • Rating: NR
There are laws against child labor in India, yet millions of underage children are still trafficked or forced by poverty to toil away in factories. Special correspondent Fred de Sam Lazaro profiles an entrepreneur who developed a labeling system for rugs made without child labor and helps get underage workers back in school.
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Wednesday, September 4, 2013

New ILO tool steps up fight against child labour

Source: UNGIFT.HUB
 
( ILO ) -  The International Labour Office (ILO) has launched a new tool to guide efforts towards the goal of eliminating the worst forms of child labour by 2016. 

 
  
The tool - " Implementing the Roadmap for achieving the elimination of the worst forms of child labour. A training guide for policy makers " - will support worldwide efforts to tackle the issue, head on. 

It defines the worst forms of child labour, presents key strategies for their elimination, outlines recommended actions for governments, employers', workers' and other civil society organizations and addresses monitoring and evaluation as an essential feature of successful action plans.

"The guide is both a training tool and a stepping-stone towards the drafting or revision of a National Action Plan (NAP) against the worst forms of child labour. It will bring new momentum to national efforts to reach this challenging goal," said Constance Thomas, Director of the ILO's International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC).

Complementing the training guide is a  Facilitators' Guide  that can assist those who wish to facilitate or support training workshops and national consultations. Spanish and French versions of the Training Guide will be released later in 2013.

The guide is released ahead of the  Global Child Labour Conference , which will take place in Brasilia, 8-10 October 2013. This conference will be a follow-up to the Global Child Labour Conference that took place in The Hague in 2010, which adopted the " Roadmap for achieving the Elimination of the worst forms of child labour by 2016 ."
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Monday, July 29, 2013

IPS – Nepal Moves to Curb Child Labour | Inter Press Service

Source: Inter Press Service

http://www.ipsnews.net/2013/07/nepal-moves-to-curb-child-labour/

By Mallika Aryal

There are an estimated 165,000 domestic child labourers in Nepal. Credit: Mallika Aryal/IPS
There are an estimated 165,000 domestic child labourers in Nepal. Credit: Mallika Aryal/IPS
KATHMANDU, Jul 25 2013 (IPS) - Last December, Pradeep Dongol, child protection officer at the Kathmandu-based Children and Women in Social Service and Human Rights (CWISH), received an urgent call from one of the NGO’s many offices in Nepal’s sprawling capital city.
Dongol rushed over to find an 11-year-old girl in the care of a CWISH staff member: her eyes were sunken, her hands covered in wounds, and she had lost patches of hair from her head.
He later learned that she had escaped from the house where she was working because she could no longer “bear…all the abuse.”
Reema (not her real name) was studying in grade three in a village about 400 km away from the capital when her parents decided to send her to Kathmandu with perfect strangers.
The family, a young couple, promised Reema’s parents that the girl would live with them, go to a good school and be an “older sister” to their young son.
However, Reema’s life in Kathmandu turned out to be very different. The couple never enrolled her in school; she ate nothing but leftovers, took care of the couple’s son, did all the housework and was never paid.
She had very little contact with her folks back home, was regularly beaten, and often pulled by her hair.
One day, on her way to drop the little boy off at his school, she met some of the local CWISH workers who teach at a school nearby. When she went home and expressed interest in going to that school, she was beaten.
The next day she ran away, and found her way to the CWISH office where she asked for protection.
Of the 7.7 million children between the ages of five and 17 in Nepal, an estimated 3.14 million are working. Two-thirds of these children are below the age of 14.
A recent rapid assessment conducted by Plan International, one of the oldest children’s development organisations in the world, and World Education estimates that over 165,000 working children are domestic labourers.
“Their plight…does not get importance because it happens within the four walls of someone’s home and not out in the open,” Bishnu Timilsina, a team leader for CWISH in Nepal, told IPS.
Rescue and Rehabilitation

Gurung believes the government has recognised its weakness, and taken a first step towards building its own capacity through the creation of a multi-sector committee comprising the CCWB, the ministry of women, children and social welfare, the health and education ministry, representatives of the ILO in Nepal and other child rights NGOs that will look specifically at cases of domestic child labour.

The government is also revising the 2002 Child Labour Act and has prepared a national master plan on the elimination of the worst forms of child labour (2011-2020), which, if endorsed by the parliament, will deal directly with domestic child labour cases.

Even as these laws are drafted, child rights activists are urging policy-makers to pay careful attention to rehabilitation of rescued child workers.

“If we rescue a child from abuse and send him [or] her back home, the child should not end up in a worse situation than before…so services—rehabilitation, educational and vocational services—within Nepal’s 75 districts have to be put in place,” Luhar pointed out.

CCWB’s Gurung says that it is much easier to deal with ignorance than willful wrongdoing when it comes to employing minors.

“You can make those who don’t know aware, but our challenge is in dealing with those who know they are violating the law and have the power to fight the system and get away,” she stressed.

Luhar and Gurung both say that combating domestic child labour cannot be done in isolation.

“You are talking about the vicious circle of poverty—the child can’t get an education, grows up without skills, can’t earn a better livelihood and is again the victim of exploitation, abuse and poverty,” says Gurung.

Both experts advocate making child protecting a national priority, including the provision of psychological counseling, rescue and rehabilitation services, education and vocational training via a nationwide programme.

“We are talking about the most productive sector of our society,” Gurung said in reference to children, adding that ignoring the problem now will “cost the country dearly” in the future.
He highlighted the Nepali tradition of bringing children from remote villages to work in private homes in urban areas, adding that, historically, wealthy couples would engage in this practice by promising rural families a better life and education and employment opportunities for one of their children.
Such offers are hard to resist: though Nepal has made progress in poverty reduction, the United Nations Development Programme’s (UNDP) Human Development Report for 2013 placed it at 157th out of 187 countries listed.
According to the National Living Standard Survey 2010-2011 more than 30 percent of Nepalis live on less than 14 dollars per month.
About 80 percent of Nepalis, like Reema’s family, live in rural areas and depend on subsistence farming. Young children are expected to help their parents with farming and household chores.
Roughly half the children under five years of age in Nepal’s remote rural belt are malnourished, while their communities lack basic services like primary healthcare, education and safe drinking water.
The custom of plucking children from their villages gained traction with the rapid industrialisation of the 1990s, when the growth of the middle class coupled with internal migration during the People’s War years(1996-2006) fuelled demand for cheap labour.
Children quickly filled the gap left by women abandoning their traditional roles as homemakers in search of paid work, and took on all the domestic duties from cooking, scrubbing and washing clothes to caring for infants and the infirm.
Now, according to Plan International and World Education’s rapid assessment, there are as many child domestic workers in urban centres (62,579) as in rural areas (61,471).
Child rights activists say one of the biggest challenges is the widespread social perception that child labour is not necessarily a bad thing.
“There’s an understanding that children have to work so that they learn the ‘value’ of labour,” Nita Gurung, programme manager of the state-run Central Child Welfare Board (CCWB), told IPS.
As a result, enforcing laws that prohibit child domestic labour is not easy.
People see young children labouring in the homes of their “neighbours, relatives and friends” and accept this as a normal part of life, says Danee Luhar, a child protection officer with the Nepal country office of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
“There is a need to break through that perception so that society renders domestic child labour unacceptable,” he told IPS.
Nepal has ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the International Labour Organisation’s (ILO) Convention 182 on the worst forms of child labour and ILO Convention 138 on minimum age for admission to employment.
These international accords were translated into national laws via Nepal’s 2007 Interim Constitution and are enshrined in the 1992 Children’s Act, the 2000 Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act, and the 2002 Bonded Labour Prohibition Act.
However, the creation of national and international legislation without an accompanying increase in the capacity to enforce them has led to confusion about which government agency is implementing which laws in cases of domestic child labour.
At present, 10 labour inspectors are charged with overseeing the entire country and its population of 30.49 million people.
These inspectors only cover formal sectors like mining, tourism and cigarette and carpet manufacturing; it is still unclear who is responsible for the rescue and rehabilitation of child labourers in informal settings, like private homes.
“It is extremely problematic because in cases of abuse and exploitation there’s first a confusion about who is in charge, and what law or act to interpret,” says UNICEF’s Luhar.
When Reema escaped her employers, for instance, she was taken to a safe house and a case was filed on her behalf at the government’s labour office.
Later, at the insistence of authorities, the perpetrators paid Reema cash compensation in the amount of 210 dollars, and signed a legal document agreeing to release her.
Reema is now safely back in her village but has yet to see the money, and her case at the labour office is pending.
“On paper there are regulations to make the perpetrators accountable but that is rarely done, and protection of victims is still not a priority,” child advocate Kamal Guragain told IPS.
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Friday, May 17, 2013

ILO Global Forum Discusses Decent Work in the Fishing Industry - The Fish Site

ILO Global Forum Discusses Decent Work in the Fishing Industry - The Fish Site:

Source: The Fish Site

May 17, 2013


GLOBAL - Government, employer and worker delegates meeting at ILO headquarters will consider ways to promote decent work in the fishing industry through the implementation and ratification of the ILO’s Work in Fishing Convention, 2007 (No. 188).
From 15 to 17 May, delegates will discuss how this Convention can be used as a tool to improve working conditions and to help address major challenges in the industry.
These challenges include the image of the fishing industry; occupational safety and health; conditions of work on small fishing vessels; forced labour and human trafficking; child labour; conditions of work of migrant fishers; illegal fishing and food security.
Delegates will also address the need to strengthen social dialogue between representatives of fishing vessel owners and fishers. They will also exchange experiences on their efforts to implement this instrument in their home countries and on their own fishing vessels.
“The Forum should agree on the way forward for the formulation of national legislation that will allow for the ratification and implementation of the Convention. There will be different challenges in many countries. These can be identified and the ILO can consider assistance in addressing them,” says Captain Nigel Campbell, the chair of the Forum.
ILO Convention No. 188 was adopted to ensure that fishers have decent working conditions on board fishing vessels with regard to minimum requirements for work on board; conditions of service; accommodation and food; occupational safety and health protection; medical care and social security. These include such matters as ensuring fishers are at least of a minimum working age, have provided sufficient rest at sea, and have clear written agreements with vessel owners covering their work on board.
The Convention puts in place a mechanism to ensure compliance with, and enforcement of, its provisions by States and provides that large fishing vessels and fishing vessels on extended international voyages may be subject to labour inspections in foreign ports.
There are benefits for fishing vessel owners as well, as the Convention will help to attract and retain fishers, to reduce accidents at sea and to address how fishers are engaged by vessel owners and employers in an increasingly globalised sector.
“The Work in Fishing Convention is one of the three pillars for safety at sea in fishing, and the working and living conditions of fishermen. The other two are the Torremolinos Convention of 1977 and the STCW-F Convention of 1995. The ratification rate of all three Conventions is way too low. Policy makers should make these essential Conventions an integral part of fisheries policies,” says Ment van der Zwan (IOE), who represents the fishing vessel owners at the meeting.
“We look forward to adopting concrete action points which will facilitate the entry into force of ILO Convention 188, and to agreeing on how we can address some of the social and labour problem areas within the sector,” a representative of the fishers says.
According to an ILO report for the meeting, challenging and often difficult working conditions are common in fishing, regardless of the type and size of the fishing operation. There is a huge diversity in the fishing industry’s various sectors, with vessels ranging from small wooden fishing vessels to huge deep-sea trawlers.
“This introduces very different employment practices, from the family-owned boat to vessels owned by large conglomerates and fishing operations, and the day at sea as opposed to voyages of many months,” explains Campbell.
“This diversity often makes it difficult for employees and employers to organize themselves into bodies that can interact as social partners.”.
The number and difference in regulatory regimes is another major challenge: in some countries the maritime safety authority monitors employment conditions, while in others it’s the labour ministry or the fisheries ministry or agency. In many countries, safety regulations are only applied to larger vessels and smaller crafts are rarely if ever inspected.
For the ILO, all people should have legal protection with respect to their conditions of work. For fishers, who provide the food that every day sustains the health of a great part of the world’s population, such legal protection should take the form of national laws, regulations or other measures which, at a minimum, implement the provisions of the Work in Fishing Convention, 2007.
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Monday, March 4, 2013

Ghanaian Child Advocate Wins U.S. Award | IIP Digital

http://iipdigital.usembassy.gov/st/english/article/2013/03/20130301143551.html#ixzz2MaiOkEGk

Source:  IIP Digital

01 March 2013

Two fishermen on beach pulling in large net (AP Images)
Young fishermen work together to haul in a net in a Ghanaian fishing community in 2008.
Washington — A Ghanaian advocate for vulnerable children has been recognized by the U.S. government for his work.

George Achibra has won the U.S. Department of Labor’s 2012 Iqbal Masih Award for the Elimination of Child Labor, Acting Deputy Under Secretary of Labor for International Affairs Carol Pier announced in a February 28 Labor Department press release.

Achibra received the award from U.S. Ambassador to Ghana Gene A. Cretz at a ceremony in Accra.

Achibra was selected for his work in rescuing hundreds of children from child labor and child trafficking in impoverished fishing communities in Ghana. A former schoolteacher, Achibra founded the Partnership for Community Development to provide services to trafficked children and raise awareness about child labor and human trafficking laws.
In announcing the award, Pier said: “Children exploited in Ghana’s fishing industry face unacceptable perils — such as drowning because they cannot swim and must dive into deep water to untangle fishing nets. Children trafficked into this industry are especially vulnerable to injury or death.
“This award honors George Achibra’s selfless dedication in helping such children escape from harm and find new hope for their future.”

The U.S. Congress established the Iqbal Masih Award for the Elimination of Child Labor in 2009 to recognize exceptional efforts by an individual, company, organization or national government to end the worst forms of child labor. It also seeks to raise international awareness about the worst forms of child labor.

The nonmonetary award honors the spirit of Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani child sold into bonded labor as a carpet weaver at age 4. He escaped his servitude and became an outspoken advocate of children’s rights, drawing international attention in his fight against child labor. Masih was killed in Pakistan at age 13 in 1995.

The 2010 Iqbal Masih Award also went to an African recipient, the Firestone Agricultural Workers Union of Liberia (FAWUL). FAWUL persevered in the face of adversity, organized workers on the Firestone Rubber Plantation and gained international support for their mission to protect workers and their children on the rubber plantation. The organization succeeded in negotiating two collective bargaining agreements that banned child labor and improved conditions for adult workers on the plantation.
Since 1995, the Labor Department has supported global efforts to combat exploitative child labor internationally. The department solicits nominations for the Iqbal Masih Award from those who know “someone who has made a difference in the lives of children laboring in exploitative work” or those who have “worked with an organization or government which has gone above and beyond to assist child laborers,” according to its website.

For more information about the Labor Department’s work and the Iqbal Masih Award, visit the Bureau of International Labor Affairs’ website.


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Saturday, March 2, 2013

In India, Missing School to Work in the Mine - NYTimes.com


Source: NYT

By 

India’s Child Labor Problem

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