Saturday, April 30, 2011
Stop Child Labour - Let's gather
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Don't let the silence to do the talking.......
Child labor and responses in South Asia
Based on officially available statistics, it is estimated that there are 21.6 million children, aged between 5 and 14 years, working in south Asia out of a total of 300 million children in this age group.
The factors that contribute to child labor in South Asia include parental poverty and illiteracy; social and economic conditions; lack of awareness; lack of access to basic and meaningful formal education and skills, internal conflicts, migration and trafficking and high rates of adult unemployment and under-employment. Attitudes towards child labor also play an important role. In South Asia, children are perceived as 'adults' at an early stage. Children are expected to perform physical work equal to an adult as early as 10 years old in some countries.
There is a great deal of commonality across the South Asian countries in the forms of child labor, most especially in the areas of:
- Child domestic labor;
- Children in hazardous child labor;
- Children in export oriented industries, much of it is home-based;
- Child trafficking and migration (both internally and across borders);
- Child bonded labor particularly in agriculture; and
- Child labor in the informal economy, particularly in urban areas.
Child domestic labor
In South Asia, child domestic labor is culturally accepted and commonly seen. This refers to situations where children are engaged to perform domestic tasks in the home of a third party or employer. Where child domestic labor is exploitative and includes trafficking, slavery, or practices similar to slavery, or work which, by its nature or the circumstances in which it is carried out, is hazardous and likely to harm the health, safety, or morals of the child, it constitutes a worst form of child labor as defined in the International Labor Organization (ILO) Worst Forms of Child Labor Convention (No. 182), 1999.
As mentioned in the official statistics by ILO, Sri Lanka has the lowest child domestic labor population (19,000 children) within South Asia.
Children in hazardous child labor
The ILO Convention No. 182 (Article 3d) defines hazardous child labor as 'work which, by its nature or the circumstances in which it is carried out, is likely to harm the health, safety, or morals of children'.
Examples of hazardous occupations include brick manufacturing, stone quarrying, fireworks manufacturing, lock making and glassware production.
The situation in Sri Lanka seems to be less problematic since, according to a child activity survey, nearly 90 per cent of the working children in the age group of 5-17 years have never experienced a health or safety hazard due to the activity in which they were engaged.
Children working in export-oriented industries
Export industries in South Asia involve a large number of child laborers mainly in the supply chain. The main export industries include carpet, footwear, soccer balls and garments in Pakistan and India, surgical instruments in Pakistan, and garments in Bangladesh.
Child trafficking
A common feature of child trafficking is that young girls and boys are trafficked from rural communities to urban areas and even to another country or region. Indicators in the hardest-hit sending areas show that the practice is internalized as a strategy to cope with poverty. Other factors contributing to child trafficking are an increasing rate of unsafe migration, weak law enforcement, insufficient household income, ill-treatment and physical abuse at home and in the community, parental alcoholism, lack of food, and forced marriages.
Child bonded labor
Despite legislation in place to abolish bonded labor in all South Asian countries, except Bangladesh, bonded labor still affects millions of the poorest and most vulnerable workers in the sub region. Very often, children are involved in bonded labor to repay loans taken by parents.
Forced labor, primarily in the form of debt bondage, is found amongst low castes, minorities, and migrants, who suffer additionally from discrimination and social exclusion. Although most prevalent in traditional agricultural production systems based on sharecropping and casual wage labor, bonded labor in South Asia also occurs in other sectors, including mining, brick factories, rice mills, carpet weaving, commercial sexual exploitation, match factories, stone cutting, and quarries.
This is the current situation of child labor conditions in South Asia. Sri Lanka is in a slightly good condition comparing with its neighboring countries. It’s time for us to give a helping hand to eliminate this complex issue.
Don’t let the silence to do the talking.
Act against child labor. We are doing our bit. Would you???
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
What is "LITTLE HANDS" ????
little hands is a project done by a team of young university students who work around one issue ; preventing child labor.
By educating the affected children,their families and the community; we hope to motivate people to action.
"Do you hear them crying? They are our own sisters and brothers.Shouldn't we do something to stop them cry?"
Let's hold them tight,and let them know that they are not alone. "Come and join us to wipe their tears...."