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Issue No: 194
June 18, 2005

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Rights column

ILO gives call to eradicate child labour from mines


photo:save the children UK

The International Labour Organisation (ILO) has given a call to eradicate child labour from mines and quarries in the next five to ten years. It has identified mining and quarrying as one of the most dangerous sectors for children to work in. Director-General of the ILO Juan Somavia said: "Children who work in mines and quarries are in such danger - risking their health and safety, and indeed their lives - that action must be taken now. One million children are carrying a burden far too heavy for their bodies and responsibilities too heavy for their years. It's up to us, together, to lift this weight from their shoulders, to get them out of the mines and quarries and into school." The new initiative by ILO calls on governments, workers' organisations and employers, particularly those in the mining sector, to work together to help remote mining and quarrying enterprises - often small, family-based operations in the informal sector - to become economically and environmentally sustainable without the use of children as workers.

Nearly 14 countries are expected to sign an accord under which they will try to eliminate child labour in all small-scale mining and quarrying in a time bound manner. These countries include Brazil, Burkina Faso, Colombia, Côte d'Ivoire, Ecuador, Ghana, Mali, Mongolia, Nicaragua, Pakistan, Philippines, Senegal, Tanzania, and Togo.

Source: One world South Asia.

 
 
 


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