250 MILLION CHILDREN IN LABOR FORCE: ILO
GENEVA (AP) - From the brothels of Asia to the carpet factories of
Pakistan, nearly twice as many children are working full time in developing
countries as previously thought, the International Labor Organization said
Monday.
The latest calculations from the UN labor agency show that 250 million
five-to-14-year-olds are employed, half of them full time. That's up
sharply from earlier estimates of 73 million full-time child workers.
The new figures come after in-depth surveys and interviews in numerous
countries. Previous estimates were based almost solely on official
statistics.
The ILO report found nearly 153 million children are working in Asia, 80
million in Africa and 17.5 million in Latin America. It called for a new
international accord banning the harshest forms of child labor: slavery,
prostitution and work in hazardous industries.
Only 49 UN members ratified a 1976 child labor convention. Some nations
said its limits on paid work were too broad.
ILO Director General Michel Hansenne said child labor only perpetuates an
endless cycle of illiteracy and poverty.
"We all know that . . . many efforts over the years will be required to
eliminate it completely," he said. "But there are some forms which are
intolerable by any standard. These deserve to be identified, exposed and
eradicated without further delay."
Slavery or child bondage still is practised in South Asia, Southeast Asia
and West Africa, the report said. Children are either sold outright or
rural families are paid in advance by "contractors" who take children away
to work in carpet weaving, glass manufacturing or prostitution.
Child trafficking for the sex industry is increasing despite better
international awareness of the problem, the ILO said.
In Asia, child prostitutes number about one million and rising, the report
said. Numbers also are increasing in Burkina Faso, the Ivory Coast, Ghana,
Kenya, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
It identified international sex networks that take Latin American children
to Europe and the Middle East, and Southern Asian children to northern
Europe and the Middle East. Child sex markets also were well established in
West Africa, Europe and the Arab world, it said.
Among other things, the ILO found that:
Certain industries are exposing their child workers to pesticide
poisoning, lung diseases or even crippling their growing bodies by forcing
them to carry heavy weights.
In Sri Lanka, more children die from pesticide poisoning than from a
combination of other childhood diseases such as malaria, tetanus and
whooping cough.
Children are exposed to dust and fumes in repair shops, woodwork
factories and construction sites in Egypt, the Philippines and Turkey.
In glass factories, children are often forced to drag loads of molten
glass from glowing furnaces amid noise levels that could cause deafness.
Children as young as three were working in match factories where they were
exposed to dust, asbestos and other hazardous fumes.
Up to five million child domestic servants work in Indonesia,
including 400,000 in the capital, Jakarta.