|
|
Society
Child Labor to End in a
Decade!
by Nitin Jugran Bahuguna
In the first
promising news concerning working children, a new International Labor
Organization (ILO) report claims that child labor has decreased globally
by 11 per cent between 2000 and 2004 - the actual numbers falling from
246 million to 218 million children. It also asserts that if the current
pace of decline is maintained, and the global momentum to stop child
labor continues, child labor could feasibly be eliminated, in most of
its worst forms, in 10 years.
More significantly, the number of children and youth aged 5-17 trapped
in hazardous work decreased by 26 per cent, to reach 126 million in 2004
as opposed to 171 million in the previous estimate compiled by ILO in
2000. Among younger child workers aged 5-14, this drop was even more
dramatic at 33 per cent, states the report entitled 'The End of Child
Labor: Within reach' released globally on May 4, 2006.
Latin America and the Caribbean have made the greatest progress with the
number of working children falling by two-thirds and only five per cent
of children now engaged in work. In Brazil - showcased as an example to
illustrate how countries can move forward in tackling child labor -
activity rates among the 5-9 age group in that country fell by 61 per
cent from 1992 to 2004 and among the 10-17 age group by 36 per cent.
Mexico too registered a significant decline. As half of the children in
Latin America live in these two countries, the reductions testify to the
fact that the overall decline is a real trend.
Asia and the Pacific also registered a significant decline in the number
of economically active children, it says. However, as the child
population also declined, the percentage of working children was less
reduced. The ILO estimates that the region still has the largest number
of child workers in the 5-14 age group - some 122 million.
ILO, though, is optimistic. "The end of child labor is within our
reach", asserts ILO Director-General Juan Somavia. "Though the fight
against child labor remains a daunting challenge, we are on the right
track. We can end its worst forms in a decade, while not losing sight of
the ultimate goal of ending all child labor," he adds.
The report, however, is not without its detractors. In India, home to
the maximum number of child laborers worldwide (12.6 million, according
to the 2001 census), there is mixed response. Leading child rights
activist Shantha Sinha feels that insistence on focusing on the worst
forms of child labor first would only give legitimacy for governments to
ignore the majority of children who are out of schools and engaged in
some form of work or the other.
"This would, in turn, render a majority of child labor invisible and
hidden," she observes. "In fact, such a vast army of child labor that is
left untouched would result in the persistence of child labor, even in
the hazardous sector." She adds, "It is only when the rights of all
children to be away from work and at school becomes a public issue that
children in armed conflict, sex work and in illicit activities will find
a congenial environment that would accept them back into the fore of the
society."
Dr Helen Sekar of the V V Giri National Labor Institute (NLI), an
autonomous body under the Indian government's Ministry of Labor is also
cautious about the promising picture painted by the ILO report.
Statistics showing decline in child labor can be tricky and simplistic,
given the complex nature of the problem in India, where a large number
of working children are hidden in the unorganized sector, she says.
At the same time, she underlines the fact that the government has, in
its clearest policy yet to abolish child labor, strengthened its
National Child Labor Projects (NCLP). It has so far launched 150 NCLPs
across the country to provide educational and other rehabilitation
services to children withdrawn from hazardous industries. During the
Tenth Five-Year Plan period (2002-07), the government has allocated Rs
6,020 million (US$1=Rs 44.8) to cover 250 districts out of a total of
601 districts under this programme. So far, 190 districts have been
covered. The other 60 will be covered later this year.
"Every child, whether a resident or a migrant, will be traced under a
very systematic monitoring system in all these districts to ensure that
all children aged between 8 and 14 are enrolled in special schools of
the NCLPs," Sekar informs.
In February 2004, the INDUS project was launched. This was designed as a
complementary effort to both NCLP and the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan
(SSA; Education for All) with 50-50 funding from the Government of India
and the US Department of Labor. The 21 districts where INDUS has been
launched on an experimental basis is separate from the 250 districts
that the NCLP covers. To ensure that these districts become child
labor-free, the programme will target mothers of working children for
inclusion in micro-credit schemes and self-help groups, while the youth
of poor families will be given specialized training in Industrial
Training Institutes (which are run by state governments and private
institutions), she adds.
While Sekar agrees that this initiative will help towards the decline of
child labor in India, she says that, for its absolute abolition, the SSA
programme must be implemented in all districts of the country.
Echoing this view, Sinha says it is the responsibility of the ILO to act
as a conscience keeper and provider of vision, and to categorically
state that every child must be in school in order to abolish child labor
in all its forms. Commending the report for recognizing the link between
child labor elimination and education for all, Sinha stresses that this
- alongwith ILO's Minimum Age Convention, 1973 - must become the basis
for laying out plans of action in a systematic manner.
The report has called upon all member states of International Programme
on the Elimination of Child Labor to adopt time-bound plans to eliminate
the worst forms of child labor by 2008. It also highlights important
challenges, particularly in agriculture, where seven out of 10 child
laborers work. Other challenges include addressing the impact of
HIV/AIDS on child labor and building stronger links between child labor
and youth employment concerns.
May 14, 2006
By arrangement with
Women's Feature Service
Top
| Society
The Week of May 21, 2006
War or Peace? Middle-East Great Game Approaching
Climax by Rajinder Puri
Unprovoked, Unwarranted Papal Assault on India
by V. Sundaram
Did Jesus Die in India? by Kusum Choppra
BJP Needs Reinvention by Dr. Subhash Kapila
The Da Vinci Tsunami by V. Sundaram
Whither South Africa by Kusum Choppra
Children of Secularism by J. Ajithkumar
Is Equality Really Possible? by TA Ramesh
Damned by Dam by VK Joshi
Think Tank Propaganda Machines & the Death of the
Free Press by Gaurang Bhatt, MD
Are the Kashmiri Pundits abandoned Dregs &
Derelicts? by V Sundaram
And, the Way Up is the Way Down ... by Pradip
Bhattacharya
Ahalya: Incest and Temptation by Satya Chaitanya
Hinduism: A Holy Water Religion by Dr. V.
Sankaran Nair
Liberty, Inequality and Enmity of State-Sponsored
Quota Raj by V.Sundaram
The Reservation Hurricane by MH Ahsan
Reservations about Quotas by Usha Kakkar
Data Backup to Avoid Disasters by Ruchi Gupta
Police Story Kolkata Diary by Dr.
Prasenjit Maiti
The Witty Side by Melvin Durai
A Gallery of Failures by Deepti Priya Mehrotra
Geetli A Long Story by Kusum Choppra
Love, Struggle and the Poetry of Nepal
by Dr. Amitabh Mitra
Rama Suresh : The Rural Aesthete by
Aparna Sharma
Child Labor to End in a Decade? by Nitin Jugran
Bahuguna
Women and Worship by Humera Afridi
|
|