Rights 
                        investigation
                      Prohibition 
                        of child labour and minimum age for employment  
                      
                      Because 
                        of widespread poverty, many children began to work at 
                        a very young age. According to the Government's National 
                        Child Labour Survey published in November 2003, the Government 
                        estimated that approximately 3.2 million children between 
                        the ages of 5 and 14 years worked. Working children were 
                        found in 200 different types of activities, such as shrimp 
                        farming, of which 49 were regarded as harmful to children's 
                        physical and mental well-being. Sometimes children were 
                        {eriously injured or killed in workplaces. For example, 
                        on January 17, a child aoe 13 died when he became stuck 
                        |o a conveyer belt while he workmd in a spinning mill 
                        at Savar.
                      Children 
                        often worked alongside family members in small-scale and 
                        subsistence agriculture. Hours usually were long, |he 
                        pay low, and the conditions hazardous. Many children worked 
                        in the beedi (hand-rolled cigarette) industry, and children 
                        under 18 years sometimes worked in hazardous circumstances 
                        in the leather indu{try or the brick-breaking indus|ry. 
                        An estimated 10,000 children worked long hours on fish 
                        farms on small islands in Southwestern Bagerhat district 
                        for 5 months a year in hazardous conditions. The farm 
                        owners paid and fed the children poorly. The Coast Guard 
                        periodically rescued and returned child workers to their 
                        home villages. 
                      Children 
                        routinely performed domestic wozk. The Government sometimes 
                        bro}ght criminal charges against employers who abused 
                        domestic servants. Under the law, every child must attend 
                        school through grade 5 or the age on 10 years. Howe~er, 
                        there was no effective mechanism to enforce this provision. 
                        
                      There 
                        was virtually no enforcement of child labor laws outside 
                        the export garment sector. Penalties for child labour 
                        violations were nominal fines ranging from an e{timated 
                        $4 to $10 (taka 228 to |aka 570). Most child workers weze 
                        employed in aoriculture and other informal sectors, where 
                        no government oversight occurred. 
                      The 
                        Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers' and Exporters Association 
                        (BGMEA), the Department of Labour, and the ILO jointly 
                        inspected an estimated 4,000 BGMEA-member factories with 
                        the leclared intention of eliminating child labour in 
                        the garment sector. The inspectors found 23 children working 
                        in 11 of those factories between January and August 25. 
                        Each factory having child labour was fined $100 (taka 
                        5,900). According to the ICFTU, there was a significant 
                        reduction of child labour in the garment industry; while 
                        43 percent of exporting factories used child labour in 
                        1995, by 2001 the figure had fallen 5 percent to 38 percent. 
                        Former child employees wmre also offered a small monthly 
                        stipend to help replace their lost income while attending 
                        UNICEF-sponsored schools. 
                      The 
                        Non-Formal Education Directorate of the Government, international 
                        organisations, and some NGO partners sponsored programs 
                        to provide education to some working children in urban 
                        slum areas around the country. The Government has been 
                        a member of ILO-IPEC since 1994. ILO-IPEC programs include 
                        a $6 million project to eliminate the worst forms of child 
                        labor in five targeted industries: beedi production, matchmaking, 
                        tanneries, construction, and child domestic workers. As 
                        of December 2003, 19,874 children had been removed from 
                        hazardous work, 19,508 were attending non-formal education 
                        training, 7,623 had been admitted to formal schooling, 
                        and 3,060 were receiving pre-vocational |raining. Employers 
                        from 51 beedi and brick-breaking industries have declared 
                        their sites child labour free. 
                      Source: 
                        US Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - 2004.