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Solidarity
message to the stop child labor Africa tour 2008
Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ)
October 24, 2008
Teachers in
Zimbabwe are cognizant of the interconnectedness of poverty, HIV/AIDS
and child labour and their negative impact on the right of children
to education. As we welcome and offer our solidarity to the STOP
CHILD LABOUR AFRICA TOUR 2008, we want the tour delegates and the
nation to be aware that several surveys on child labour carried
out in Zimbabwe confirm that this social ill is a reality in our
midst.
Zimbabweans
know of countless children under 15 years who are employed as domestic
servants, turning to gold panning, rushing for illegal diamond mining,
working in farms, selling wares even late into the night at places
likely to expose them to immoral activities, assisting disabled
parents to beg, illegally crossing the border to work in neighboring
countries, engaging in child prostitution and aiding the trafficking
of illicit drugs.
While child
labour practices are so glaring in the country, they have not featured
prominently among other forms of child abuses which our society
has stood sharp to fight. The STOP CHILD LABOUR AFRICA TOUR 2008
offers Zimbabwean stakeholders an opportune time to appreciate the
significance of this social phenomenon and renew their commitment
to eliminate it. As the nation's teachers, we are guided by
the following cardinal points in our campaign against child labour:
- Combating
child labour will increase our education's internal and
external efficiency and will see the country moving towards the
achievement of Education for All (EFA) goals and MDGs.
- Child labour
is repetitive work and relies on low level skill, thus it is not
productive work and does not therefore contribute to the competitiveness
and productivity of our economy.
- It denies
children of productive opportunities and choices in their adult
life. After all the latent talents in children are unlikely to
be exposed if they do not attend school.
- It creates
a poll of a people desperate for a meaningful living and therefore
a fertile ground for recruiting militias who can be used in political
and armed conflicts.
- Because child
labour is outlawed, it if often closely associated with other
social ills and illegal activities.
Visit the PTUZ
fact
sheet
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