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World
Day Against Child Labour 2007: New global partnership against child
labour in agriculture
ILO News
June 12, 2007
http://tinyurl.com/2h24vq
The International
Labour Organization (ILO) today joined forces with five key international
agricultural organizations to launch a new landmark global partnership
to tackle child labour in agriculture.
Members of the
new partnership signed into existence during the ILO's annual
International Labour Conference are: the ILO, Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO), International Fund for Agricultural Development
(IFAD), International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) of
the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR),
International Federation of Agricultural Producers (IFAP) and International
Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco
and Allied Workers' Associations (IUF).
"I very
much welcome this partnership with these international agricultural
organizations because it is only by mainstreaming child labour issues
into mandates and policies and by working together that we can strengthen
the worldwide movement to eliminate child labour", said ILO
Director-General Juan Somavia. "Through a concerted effort,
we can reach the target of ending the worst forms of child labour
by 2016."
Worldwide, agriculture
is the sector where by far the largest number of working children
can be found - an estimated 70 per cent, of whom 132 million
are girls and boys aged 5-14. These children are helping to produce
the food and beverages we consume. Their labour is used for crops
such as cereals, cocoa, coffee, fruit, sugar, palm oil, rice, tea,
tobacco and vegetables. They also work in livestock raising and
herding, and in the production of other agricultural materials such
as cotton and cottonseed.
Agriculture
is one of the most dangerous sectors and is especially perilous
for children. Exposed to the same hazards as adults in agriculture,
the risks to children are even greater because their bodies and
minds are still developing and they lack work experience. In some
cases, work begins for children as young as five, and children under
10 years account for 20 per cent of child labour in some rural areas,
according to estimates by the ILO-International Programme on the
Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC).
At the same
time, the ILO stressed that not all work that children undertake
in agriculture is bad for them or would qualify as work to be eliminated
under Convention No. 138 or Convention No. 182. Tasks appropriate
to a child's age and that do not interfere with a child's
schooling and leisure time can be a normal part of growing up in
a rural environment.
Many children
carry out work which can threaten their lives, limbs, health and
general well being. The hazards they face run the gamut from the
mixing, handling and applying of toxic pesticides to using dangerous
cutting tools, to working in extreme temperatures, operating powerful
farm vehicles and heavy machinery and working long hours.
Child labour
limits children's access to proper education. Lack of, or
poor education, reduces their hopes for a better future. The problem
is exacerbated as many agricultural child labourers are from rural
families who constitute two-thirds of the world's poorest
people.
Girls working
in agriculture carry a special burden. Girl child labourers are
often an invisible part of the agricultural work force and are particularly
disadvantaged as they often undertake household chores prior to
going to work in the fields as well as upon returning from them.
The long hours of work can lead to physical and mental exhaustion,
negatively impacting the health and well being of girl child labourers.
Key areas of
cooperation for the new partnership are policies and activities
to:
- promote
the application of laws on child labour in agriculture, especially
to ensure that children do not carry out hazardous work in agriculture,
- improve rural
livelihoods, and mainstream child labour issues into national
agricultural policies and programme,
- reduce the
urban, rural and gender gap in education,
- promote youth
employment opportunities in agriculture and rural areas.
"We realize
that these organizations provide a unique conduit to national-level
decision- and policy-makers in agricultural ministries and agricultural
advisory services, and in building stronger links with farmers and
agricultural workers, and their communities", explains Michele
Jankanish, Director of the ILO's IPEC. "This partnership
is particularly exciting in terms of the opportunities for greater
cooperation on field-level projects, and is a really great step
forward in helping these children in agriculture, their families
and communities."
ILO-International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC)
The International
Labour Organization's goal with regard to child labour is
the progressive elimination of all its forms worldwide. The worst
forms of child labour, which include hazardous work, commercial
sexual exploitation, trafficking of children and all forms of slavery,
among others, should be abolished as a priority.
The ILO seeks
to strategically position child labour elimination at the macro-level
in socio-economic development and poverty reduction strategies of
its member countries in order to encourage mainstreaming and integration
of child labour issues and concerns. In doing so, the ILO -
through its International Programme on the Elimination of Child
Labour (IPEC) - emphasizes the need for assessing and monitoring
the extent and nature of the problem, the strengthening of institutional
capacities and the provision of assistance for the development and
implementation of national policies.
It is clear
from IPEC experience that parents and families who are given a viable
choice prefer to keep children out of the workplace. Thus, the ILO's
strategies have put increasing emphasis on poverty alleviation particularly
through the promotion of opportunities for decent work for parents
as well as expanding and improving institutional mechanisms for
education and law enforcement, among other key areas of work. As
such, the work of IPEC fits into and supports various development
frameworks, such as the Millennium Development Goals, the Poverty
Reduction Strategy Papers and the Education for All Initiative.
For more information,
please contact the ILO Department of Communication in Geneva at
+4122/799-7912 or visit the IPEC website at: www.ilo.org/childlabour.
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