|
Back to Index
Mining
industry attracts child labour as economy picks up
IRIN News
October 14, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=90770
The economic upswing
in Zimbabwe is luring workers under 18-years-old to the now bustling
mining town of Shurugwi, about 350km south of the capital Harare
in Midlands Province.
Tinashe Mugwira, 15,
left home in January this year and walked the 50km to Shurugwi in
search of work at the mines in the mineral belt known as the Great
Dyke, where gold, chrome and nickel are found.
"I had always heard
that these Chinese were employing young children for as long as
they can work on the mines, so I decided to come here when I stopped
going to school after my father fell ill and my mother could not
raise money for food," a skinny Mugwira told IRIN.
Foreign mining companies
started investing in the area after locally owned mining firms went
bankrupt due to the country's decade-long recession. Child rights
activists say the use of child labour is becoming "common practice"
in many of the country's mines.
Mugwira said he was one
of scores of children working on the opencast mine - ferrying chrome
ore in buckets and wheelbarrows - with no formal contracts, protective
clothing or medical benefits.
"I get US$10 for
every ton I fetch and it takes me about three days to do so. We
work from sunrise to sunset together with the adults and are treated
the same, but the job is so hard," he said.
Mugwira has been bedridden
three times since he began working at the mine, suffering from severe
coughing and headaches, but has never received medical treatment
and was unable to say what his medical condition was.
He lives in a squatter
settlement at the foot of the nearby Boterekwa escarpment, with
other children and their adult colleagues, many of whom work as
illegal gold-miners.
A friend from school
working with him on the chrome mine was recently taken to Shurugwi
hospital by his older brother, an illegal gold miner, after falling
ill. He died of respiratory complications shortly after being admitted.
"It is risky working
on these mines but I have no choice. I am the [oldest] in our family
and my brothers and sister will die of hunger if I go back home
without money," said Mugwira.
Elfas Shangwa, chairman
of the Harare-based NGO New Hope Foundation, which campaigns for
the rights of children, said: "Poverty is the main cause behind
this prevalent practice of child labour at mines and in other sectors
of the economy."
An IRIN correspondent
visited two mines in the Shurugwi area and witnessed about 17 children
working. Most were working on a temporary basis.
According to a mine worker
who declined to be identified, the use of minors was not being practised
by established mining companies, as checks were carried out, but
was occuring at smaller mines.
Police
inaction
"For a long time,
we have been receiving so many reports of child labour on mines
throughout the country and intend to carry out our own investigations.
Unfortunately, when we report the cases to the police, they tell
us they can hardly do anything because Zimbabwe does not have explicit
laws on child labour," Shangwa told IRIN.
Zimbabwe is a signatory
to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and the International
Labour Organization (ILO) anti-child labour convention, and Shangwa
said his organization was lobbying government to adopt policies
discouraging child labour practices.
In Mazowe, a farming
district in Mashonaland Central Province, about 70km northeast of
Harare, businessmen who have recently acquired small mining concessions
use children to mine gold ore and then load it on to trucks.
"The issue of child
labour is neither here nor there," Isdore Rukweza, one of the
businessmen who has secured mining concessions, told IRIN. "If
these children don't come and work for us, their families will have
no money to send them to school or buy food."
An activist with a locally-based
NGO, Coalition Against Child Labour in Zimbabwe, who declined to
be identified, told IRIN the group was embarking on a nationwide
survey of child labour practices with other child rights organizations.
"We are
aware that children are working long hours in unhygienic conditions
for small wages. In some of these cases, adults are shunning the
jobs because the employers pay very little," the activist said.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|