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| CONCERN - National Surveys on Child Labour | |||
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Introduction: Concern for Children
and Environment – Nepal, a nonprofit NGO, was established in March
1993 with the objective of advocating children’s rights and improving
the social and natural environment for children in Nepal. In order to be
a true advocate for children CONCERN, from its inception, has been
conducting research to ascertain the reality of this situation and
present facts and figures to the peacemakers, implementers and
duty-bearers at all levels. In this process CONCERN conducted its first
research on the situation of Child Porters in 1994. As per further
CONCERN studies in 1997, there are more than 70 sectors where children
have been regularly employed as child labourers. CONCERN completed
specific research on the plight of child labourers in stone quarries
during 2000. This report is the culmination of national level research
on Child Labour in Stone Quarries. Child Labour in Nepal: Among
a population of 23.4 million in Nepal, 10.7 million are children under
16 years of age – almost 44% of the total population. According to a
nationwide study by Tribhuvan University in 1999, 2.6 million children -
more than 27% - are at work as child labourers today. 60% of those
children are between the ages of 6 and 14 years. However, 1.7 million
are economically active and 0.9 million are working without pay.
Although the country has ratified several international and regional
conventions concerning protection of the rights of the child, including
the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC), children’s
rights continue to be violated in practice. The UNCRC has yet to be
translated into reality: best interests of the child, rights to
education, leisure, recreation and cultural activities, and the right to
be protected from all types of exploitation and abuse are not seriously
considered to date. Stone Quarries and Child Labourers: The
stone quarry is an area in which child labour is used and often
exploited by owners, employers, middlemen, adult workers, local children
and at times even parents. Since this is the first study of its kind,
accurate statistics at the national level are not available on the
number of stone quarries and workers employed. Study teams estimate that
thousands of stone quarries exist in different parts of the country with
tens of thousands of children working in them. This is certainly one of
the most hazardous and worst forms of child labour and exploitation.
Just to mention a few of the jobs that children perform in stone
quarries includes activities such as excavating and extracting stones
and boulders, loading trucks for transport and crushing the boulders
into gravel. In terms of health and hygiene, it is extremely dangerous
as dust particles cause respiratory illnesses in addition to many other
work-related diseases and injuries, largely due to lack of even minimal
protective gear. Stone quarries are considered a threat to children’s
health, education and development. Despite the legal provisions of
Labour Act 1991, Children’s Act 1992, Children’s Regulation 1994,
and the recent Child Labour Prohibition and Regulation Act 2000, the
majority of children continue to be exploited and abused in this field
as in others. CONCERN-Nepal
has carried out various programmes for destitute children within and
outside of the Kathmandu Valley and has long felt the need for working
among child labourers in stone quarries. In attempting to initiate
specific programmes to address the needs of child workers in stone
quarries, it was necessary to become familiar with their situation,
determine their number and their distinctive problems prior to assisting
them with viable solutions. Consequently, CONCERN-Nepal became involved
in this research and the results cover different aspects such as
socioeconomic background, health status, employment and living
conditions, family income, education, ethnicity, working hours, wages,
age, gender issues and more. The most powerful indicators stressing an
immediate need for relief and support in this field come from the voices
of the oppressed children themselves. adopted
during the course of the study concentrated on Child-Centered
Participatory Research (CCPR) techniques used to listen directly to the
voices of the children, structured questionnaires, interviews, focus
group discussions and field observation. Altogether
208 children working in stone quarries from different parts of the
nation were selected for individual interview and about 400 children
were observed in total. The results are firsthand information gleaned
from them, 74 parents and 22 owners of stone quarries who were also
interviewed. Survey Areas: Stone
quarries exist in almost all areas of the country. Given limited
resources and time constraints, the research team conducted sample
surveys in 14 out of 75 districts, representing all geographical and
climatic regions, in order to determine the overall trend of child
labour. Research Data Overview: Results based on interaction with children, parents
and through direct observation found children between 5 and 16 years of
age toiling in stone quarries around the country rather than enjoying The
Rights of Children” was previously an unknown subject to all concerned
in stone quarries. Survey Conclusions: Despite
the large number of stone quarry children in peril, this field
has hardly been recognized and has yet to draw the attention of
policymakers and duty-bearers. Government at all levels, the UN, INGOs,
local NGOs, and CBOs will have to work in conjunction on this issue to
eradicate/minimize worst forms of child labour specifically in stone
quarries. Children as young as 5 years old are working in
stone quarries and most of the older children are illiterate. They are
exploited, harassed and abused in their working places physically,
economically, mentally, sexually and psychologically by employers,
owners, adult workers and parents. They
are overworked and underpaid. Due to unhygienic and dangerous
conditions, children suffer from various kinds of disease and
respiratory illness, skin infections, visual disorders, back and muscle
aches, sprains and fractures, and many children sustain work-related
physical injuries on a regular basis. Poverty
appears to be the principal justification parents or guardians offer for
pushing children into this field of labour. Parental ignorance about the
importance of education, lack of alternative income sources,
discrimination in schools and in the society, and lack of access to
school are some of the other reasons that innocent children have been
suffering in stone quarries. Some children are still found working as
bonded labourers even though the Constitution was amended in July 2000
abolishing this form of slave labour and all outstanding debts effective
simultaneously with the provisions of the new law. Tragically child
rights remain ideas on paper and never reach these children, their
parents and employers. Children were found working even during odd
hours, in direct opposition to the general standard and rules set by the
International Labour Organization and National Labour Act. Children are
made responsible for assuming the burden of taking care of their
families with their rights to education, rights to enjoy their
childhood, and rights to participate in decision-making for that
directly affecting their lives completely violated by all concerned
duty-bearers. No one, at the time research was conducted, had developed
any kind of mechanism to monitor child labour in stone quarries and
their conditions were utterly disregarded. However, Child Development
Society (CDS) has since been working in Mahadev Besi, Dhading District
to uplift the situation of stone quarry children through provision of
direct support and education. Recommendations: With
consideration to the overall scenario of stone quarry children, the
following actions need to be taken immediately, particularly with a view
of the situation towards improvement and abolishment of this crime
against children. Development
and enforcement of laws - Government must act
immediately by enforcing laws to protect children from all kinds of
exploitation and abuse in stone quarries. Necessary policies should be
developed and those presently existing improved. In line with the laws,
a national level strategy for working children must be developed with
special efforts made to provide positive discrimination on behalf of
working girls. A national level campaign is needed to officially
register all stone quarries, employees and working conditions to ensure
proper monitoring. ·
Children below the age of 14 must be protected from all forms of
exploitation and abuse. ·
Children working as bonded labourers and landless parents must be
liberated in accordance with the Constitution. ·
Minimum wage must be fixed for children who are permitted by law
to work. ·
Working hours for children must be fixed with appropriate breaks
and recreation facilities. ·
Children must be able to attend non-formal education classes
provided by NGOs and CBOs. ·
Duty-bearers must be made aware of children’s rights and the
obligations in upholding them. ·
Employers must organize proper safety measures: helmets, masks
and rings, and provision of first-aid treatment on the premises for
immediate access. ·
Owners must be made responsible for bearing costs of all
work-related accidents and illnesses through health benefits and
insurance. Private
sector - All NGOs, CBOs, and the UN should be
working together on this issue in a coordinated effort to make an impact
on children who most need support. They should act as true advocates to
implement children’s rights all over the country and should work from
the family level, as that would add considerably to the success in
directly benefiting children. ·
ILO Conventions and UNCRC awareness-building programmes should be
organized for employers, owners, parents and children in particular. ·
Monitoring and reporting mechanisms must be developed for
children in industries where their rights are violated. ·
Income generation and bank saving training should be organized
for families of children working in stone quarries. ·
Alternative job-skills training should be provided to children
permitted by law to work. ·
Support should be provided in developing a national strategy on
child labour and active field implementation, and organizing educational
and recreational facilities in the workplace. (The
executive Summary is extracted from the newly released research report
on “Child Labour in Stone Quarries” A National Survey Conducted by
CONCERN-Nepal on July 5th, 2002 Kathmandu) |
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| ©Copyright 2003, CONCERN - Nepal. All rights reserved. | |||