No School Days for Working Children
At the end of the northern summer kids head back to the adventures of a new school year around now.

“Selling and trafficking of children, debt bondage and serfdom, forced recruitment of children for armed conflict, child prostitution, pornography, and drug activities are among the worst forms of labour millions of children are trapped in.” (CNS photo/Jorge Adorno, Reuters)
But for millions of children worldwide the adventures of a new school year remain but a dream. Sadly, these children 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 breaks.
Their classrooms will be sweatshops, farm fields, and battlefields. Their days will be filled with long, dirty, dangerous work. And the lessons they will learn are that life is cruel and unfair.
According to the International Labour Organization’s (ILO) latest report, “Global child labor trends 2008 to 2012,” approximately 168 million children aged 5-17 were involved in child labour – that is, work not in legal accordance with ILO Conventions – in 2012.
And even worse, nearly half of all child labourers – 85.3 million – work in hazardous conditions, or what the ILO terms as the worst forms of child labour.
According to the ILO, “hazardous work includes night work and long hours of work, exposure to physical, psychological or sexual abuse; work underground, under water, at dangerous heights or in confined spaces; work with dangerous machinery, equipment and tools, or which involves the manual handling or transport of heavy loads; and work in an unhealthy environment which may, for example, expose children to hazardous substances, agents or processes, or to temperatures, noise levels, or vibrations damaging their health.”
Selling and trafficking of children, debt bondage and serfdom, forced recruitment of children for armed conflict, child prostitution, pornography, and drug activities are among the worst forms of labour millions of children are trapped in.
And, according to the ILO, every year about 22,000 children are killed while working.
Globalisation is a key factor to child labour. Children are cheap to employ; they are docile and easily controlled, and do not organise to defend their human rights. To unscrupulous corporate executives, child labour offers an attractive incentive to keep labour costs down in a highly competitive global market.
When money is the bottom line – as is virtually always the case in the corporate world – children are simply tools to be used and abused. Many companies like Disney and Wal-Mart (owners of Makro in South Africa) either know, or don’t care to know, that their products are often made at the expense of suffering children.
In a Maryknoll Magazine article, headlined “Stunting child labor”, we read how “girls of 16 sew Disney garments for subcontractors in China and Bangladesh, getting paid 12 cents [US; R1,57 in our money] an hour for 15-hour days, seven days a week. In Honduras, 14-year-old girls get 43 cents [US; R5,62 in our money] an hour, far below a living wage, in miserable conditions to make Wal-Mart clothing.”
Let work to change all of this injustice against millions of children.
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, pass loophole-free legislation severely penalising corporations that take advantage of sweatshop workers, give tax incentives to companies that financially help their suppliers provide a living wage and decent working conditions for their employees. And we can patronise Fair Trade certified companies.
Furthermore, we can visit www.freethechildren.com to learn about kids helping kids, and how we can help their efforts.
Let’s tirelessly work for the day when cruel and dangerous children’s work gives way to school work and homework!
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