MAKING A DIFFERENCE
By Tony Magliano
No school fun for child labourers
It’s that special time of the year again — at least for
parents — when kids start heading back to school. And for those
who have discovered the joy of learning, school is an adventure!
But, sadly, millions of children worldwide do not attend school. And
so they will never learn to read or write. They will not acquire computer
skills. They will not experience singing in chorus, going on field trips,
or playing at recess. Their classrooms will be sweatshops, farm fields
and battlefields. Their days will be filled with long, dirty and dangerous
work. And the lesson they will learn is that life is cruel and unfair.
According to the UN’s International Labour Organization (ILO),
there are approximately 215 million child labourers — aged five-17 — in
the world. The ILO defines child labour as “work that deprives
children of their childhood, their potential and their dignity, and that
is harmful to physical and mental development.”
Among all child labourers, approximately 115 million of them work in
the worst forms of child labour including slavery — the sale and
trafficking of children — debt bondage, child prostitution and
the production of child pornography, making and selling of drugs, forced
armed conflict, and hazardous work that jeopardizes their physical, mental
or moral well-being.
For example, an ILO report “The end of child labour: Millions of
voices, one common hope,” states that nearly 1 million children
work in small-scale mines and quarries. “Children dig and haul
ore out of underground mines, dive into rivers and flooded tunnels, and
transport heavy materials. They grind rock and mix it with mercury to
extract gold. They pound rocks into gravel. They live in areas where
soil, water and air may be contaminated with heavy metals. On a daily
basis, they risk serious injury, chronic illness and even death.”
Child labour exists largely because so many families are desperately
poor. Countless parents throughout the world have no sustainable employment
and no land to even grow food. They strive to scratch out some kind of
an existence for their family. But their heroic efforts are not enough.
Sadly, children must work, and often in terrible conditions at that,
in order for the family to survive.
Local governments unable or unwilling to provide assistance, wealthy
nations selfishly giving less than 0.9 per cent of their annual budget
for international poverty-focused assistance, trade policies that often
favour rich nations over poor countries, and multinational corporations
like Wal-Mart that take unscrupulous advantage of sweatshop workers who
make many of their products, are among the reasons millions of parents
in the developing world cannot support their families, thus making child
labour an unjust necessity.
We can’t let this continue!
Together we can stop all of this selfish injustice.
We can vote for compassionate politicians, and urge sitting legislators
to greatly increase international poverty-focused assistance, establish
fair trade policies with all poor nations, stop subsidizing corporations
like grain commodity companies that then undercut small businesses in
the developing world, pass loophole-free legislation severely penalizing
corporations that take advantage of sweatshop workers and give tax incentives
to those companies that financially help their suppliers provide a living
wage and decent working conditions for their employees.
And we can patronize fair trade certified companies.
Furthermore, we can visit www.freethechildren.com to learn
about kids helping kids.
Let’s tirelessly work for the day when cruel and dangerous children’s
work gives way to school work and homework!
Magliano is an internationally syndicated social justice and peace columnist. |