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Economic
crisis hits children harder
IRIN News
October 22, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=81062
Every morning, six days
a week, Brighton Ziruvi, 13, boards a commuter bus for a 12km trip
from his low-income suburb of Dzivaresekwa in the Zimbabwean capital,
Harare, to the central business district.
With a satchel full off
mobile phone recharge cards strapped to his back, he heads to the
street corner he calls his "shop", and shouts his voice
hoarse until dusk, trying to sell to passersby.
In the evening he jostles
with adult commuters for transport home, and then surrenders the
day's takings to his "boss", a woman who buys the recharge
cards from a mobile communications company.
"Selling juice-up
cards is not a joke," Ziruvi told IRIN. "I am out there
in the sun the whole day and sometimes I go home with virtually
nothing, on an empty stomach. That means the boss gives me nothing
as well, because I am paid on commission." He started hawking
three months ago.
His parents encourage
him to keep going because it provides the family some much-needed
extra income. His father buys fish at a nearby lake and sells it,
while his mother is a vegetable vendor.
Schools
out
Ziruvi is among thousands
of children below the age of 18 who have quit school and are on
the streets trying to help families make ends meet. Education is
the last thing on his mind.
"What education
are you talking about?" he replied when asked. "I'll probably
go back to school next year when the teachers return. That is, if
they return. At the moment the classroom doors are locked."
Zimbabwe's dwindling
band of teachers who have not yet abandoned the profession or left
the country, do very little teaching these days; they are protesting
what galloping inflation has done to their salaries, and the end-of-year
examinations hang in the balance due to industrial action.
Ziruvi has ambitions;
his eyes are set on the black market foreign currency trade. "I
am confident that one day I will drive one of the latest BMWs on
the road. I am planning to get into forex, and then ngoda [diamonds]
and possibly fuel."
The problem
of working children in Harare was getting worse, the programme coordinator
at the Coalition
Against Child Labour and Abuse in Zimbabwe, Pascal Masocha,
recently told a workshop organised by the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU).
According to the coalition's
research, the number of employed minors - with ages ranging from
five to 17 - had jumped from 60 percent in 2007 to 75 percent so
far in 2008. HIV and AIDS, the country's unparalleled economic crisis,
the collapse of family support networks as a result of the strain,
were all factors driving the increase, said Masocha.
He pointed out that children
were not just hustling on the streets - typically selling food items
and hawking phone recharge cards - but were also expected to look
after elderly or infirm parents.
"Pathetic"
The problem
of child labour is not restricted to Harare; the Child
Protection Society (CPS) told IRIN the situation in other parts
of the country was "pathetic".
"The year 2008 clearly
shows that child labour is on the increase, not only in Harare,
but throughout the country. The use of minors in employment that
is detrimental to them has reached saddening proportions,"
said CPS information officer Shemiah Nyaude.
"Basically, the
problem emanates from the macro-economic crisis that Zimbabwe is
going through. With each year the crisis is deepening, and accompanying
that is rising unemployment and, of course, poverty."
For years, an estimated
80 percent of the people have been below the poverty datum line,
in an economy marked by the highest inflation rate in the world
— now officially at 231 million percent, but unofficially
thought to be many times higher - acute shortages of basic commodities,
a crumbling health system and the incapacity of government to provide
social safety nets.
"Vulnerable household
heads cannot access social support from the government, and that
leaves children with the burden of having to fend for families.
It seems the relevant authorities are burdened with other things,
to the extent that they view the curbing of child labour as a luxury,"
said Nyaude.
No enforcement
Although laws against
child labour existed in Zimbabwe, he said municipal authorities
and the police were not enforcing them, and blamed companies that
"look aside when children are used in the sale of their products".
Nyaude also blamed parents
"for exacerbating child labour through the wrongful thinking
that children have to go through difficult experiences in order
to be equipped for future challenges".
ZCTU's acting secretary
general, Japhet Moyo, said his organisation was "extremely
concerned with the extent of child labour" and accused the
government of "paying lip service to the problem".
"Children have been
left on their own, and it seems that the government thinks that
the problem of child labour is confined to the International Labour
Organisation and NGOs. Zimbabweans are among the most heavily taxed
in the world and one wonders why some of that money cannot go towards
social security," Moyo told IRIN.
He said child labour
rendered children vulnerable because, left to fend for themselves,
they were "particularly prone to self-abuse through drugs and
beer, and to abuse by others sexually, psychologically and physically".
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