EGYPT
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1. Child Labor in Egypt In 1998, the International Labor Organization (ILO) estimated that 10 percent of children between the ages of 10 and 14 in Egypt were working.554 According to a 1988 national survey conducted by Egypt’s Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics (CAPMAS), approximately 1.47 million children between the ages of 6 and 14 worked.555 Other sources suggest that the number of working children in Egypt reached 1.5 million in 1999, making up 9 percent of the country’s total labor force.556 According to one study, nearly 65 percent of poor families in Egypt send at least one child to work.557 Government studies reveal that the concentration of working children is higher in rural than in urban areas.558 Nationally, the greatest number of working children is in agriculture, and younger children are more likely to work in agricultural areas.559 According to a report released by Human Rights Watch in 2001, over one million children between the ages of 7 and 12 are hired each year to work in agricultural cooperatives. Employed to work on pest management, these children manually remove and destroy leaves infected by cotton leaf worms.560 They do seasonal work for 11 hours per day, seven days a week, far above the number of hours permitted under Egypt’s Child Law. The children are exposed to heat and pesticides and suffer beatings from foremen who supervise their work.561 While the number of working children is nearly equally divided between boys and girls in rural areas, boys account for approximately 70 percent of working children in urban areas.562 According to a survey in urban Cairo, most girls work in clothing or textile manufacturing, while most boys work as mechanics or in the retail or service sector jobs.563 In Egypt’s formal economy, children work in the carpet, leather tanning, and textile industries.564 Children from economically disadvantaged families often work as apprentices, for example, as apprentices in auto repair and craft shops, in heavier industries such as construction, and in brick making and textile production.565 Children also work in hide tanneries, where they are involved in unskilled manual activities, such as cleaning hides, preparing materials, and packaging.566 In the informal economy, children commonly work as unpaid labor in family or cottage industries such as carpet weaving. Carpet making is a traditional craft in Egypt, and girls between 10 and 14 years of age often learn to make knots and follow patterns at home from older family members.567 Some child weavers attend school for half a day while others do not attend school at all.568 Many children, especially daughters from poor families, work as domestic servants in the homes of wealthy families.569 Local culture supports this role for girls.570 Girls working in domestic service are often deprived of an education, and many suffer physical and sexual abuse within the homes where they work.571 In urban areas, street children sell items or resort to begging to meet their basic needs and are frequently controlled by gang leaders.573 2. Children’s Participation in School Between 1995 and 1996, the primary gross attendance rate was 94.9 percent, and the primary net attendance rate was 83.3 percent. 573 In 1996, the primary gross enrollment rate was 100.5 percent, and the primary net enrollment rate was 9 4.9 percent.574 Based on findings from a 1994 study, as much as 37 percent of Egyptian children do not complete basic education.575 Poverty is the main reason cited for children dropping out of school prematurely, with poor families preferring the money children can earn at work to the benefits of schooling.576 In the case of girls, cultural and social traditions can also be a significant factor, with families choosing to keep them at home and out of school.577 3. Child Labor Law and Enforcement Egypt’s Labor Law No. 137 prohibits children 12 years old or younger from working under any conditions.578 The Labor Law also states that all working children must have a health fitness certificate and an annual health examination, and special health insurance is compulsory for all child workers over the age of 12.579 Ministerial Decree No. 12 limits the employment of children under the age of 15 in 11 specified sectors.580 A governor has the authority to waive this decree, which occurs frequently in the case of seasonal work. Under the waiver, children between the ages of 12 and 14 must secure permission from the Ministry of Education to work under certain, predefined conditions.581 Egypt’s Child Law of 1996 raised the minimum work age from 12 to 14, but allowed for provincial governors, with the consent of the Ministry of Education, to allow children between the ages of 12 and 14 to be employed in seasonal agricultural work that is not hazardous and does not interfere with their education.582 Children in the 12 to 14 age group may also participate in vocational training provided by employers.583 Article 66 of the law prohibits children from working over six hours a day or more than four consecutive hours. Children are required to take one or more breaks totaling at least one hour during a work shift and may not work overtime or at night (between 8 p.m. and 7 a.m.).584 Articles 67–69 require employers to issue each child employee (aged 15 or younger) an identification card that has a Ministry of Manpower and Migration (MOMM) stamp, and to display the child’s name on a board in the workplace.585 In April 2001, the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Agriculture and Land Reclamation Affairs issued Ministerial Decree No. 1454, making it illegal to employ children below the age of 14 in agriculture, as specified by the Child Labor Law No. 12.586 The Child Law No. 12 of 1996 recognizes all children under the age of 18 as juveniles.587 Employers are prohibited from hiring a juvenile without first obtaining a medical certificate guaranteeing that he or she is physically capable of work and free from any diseases.588 MOMM Decree 14 modified the Child Law to require that a juvenile’s wages be paid only to the juvenile.589 In 1997, Egypt’s MOMM issued two decrees restricting the employment of children in hazardous work. According to these decrees, children under the age of 15 are prohibited from work involving furnaces or ovens in bakeries, freezing and refrigeration units, fertilizers, acids, or chemicals; work in cement factories, petroleum and distillation labs, or pressurized gas industries; cotton bailing; work involving bleaching, dyeing, and textile printing; or jobs requiring heavy lifting. Children under the age of 17 are prohibited from employment in a number of areas, including mining, smelting of metals, working with explosives, welding, tanneries, fertilizer industries, or butchering of animals.590 According to the Penal Code, prostitution and sex tourism are prohibited in Egypt. Penalties are more severe for child prostitution or child pornography involving children under the age of 16.591 The MOMM is responsible for labor inspections, and maintains approximately 2,000 inspectors who are charged with investigating safety, health, and age violations. Inspectors work out of 450 different MOMM offices in Egypt’s 26 governorates.592 In 2000, the MOMM issued Decree No. 117 which established a specialized Child Labor Unit within the labor inspection department. The MOMM is currently working with the International Labor Organization’s International Program on the Elimination of Child Labor (ILO-IPEC) and the Arab Labor Organization to train and educate inspectors in the Unit.593 Local trade unions have reported that the MOMM adequately enforces child labor laws in state-owned enterprises, but there has been much criticism that the MOMM has not enforced the restrictions of the 1996 Child Law in the informal sector. Article 74 of the Child Law calls for the owners of establishments where working children are found to pay a fine of between US$27 and US$133 per illegal child worker. Fines are doubled in the case of repeat offenders.594 In addition, governors at the provincial level have the power to rescind the license of a workshop that hires children under the age of 14. Finally, parents and employers can be fined from US$59 to $147 for forcing their children to work and not allowing them to go to school, or they can be sent to prison for up to one month.595 In 1999, two cases of illegal child labor were reported.596 Egypt ratified ILO Convention No. 138 on Minimum Age for Employment on June 9, 1999, and ratified ILO Convention No. 182 on May 6, 2002.597 4. Addressing Child Labor and Promoting Schooling a. Child Labor Initiatives In 1988, Presidential Decree No. 54 created the National Council for Children and Motherhood. The Council’s principal responsibility is to formulate a national plan for the protection of mothers and children, focusing in particular on the areas of social welfare, health, education and social protection. The Council includes active participation by the Ministers of Social Affairs, Health, Culture, Education, Manpower and Vocational Training, Planning, Information, the chairman of the High Council for Youth and Sports, and the First Lady.598 Various initiatives have targeted child welfare and child labor in Egypt. UNICEF has been working in urban slums and other impoverished regions of rural Egypt supporting micro- credit schemes since 1993. It makes small loans to women under the condition that they ensure that their children attend classes.599 Other efforts have targeted specific sectors. USAID, for example, is working with the Alexandria Cotton Exporters Association to develop a logo that publicizes a child-free certification.600 In addition, the ILO in Cairo is currently implementing a rapid assessment survey that will provide updated estimates on the number of working children in Egypt.601 b. Educational Alternatives Egypt’s Constitution mandates that education should be free for all children.602 The Education Law No. 139 (1981) calls for compulsory primary education through eighth grade and requires children to attend school until they reach the age of 15.603 In February 1996, the Ministry of Education established the Mubarak Program for Social Cooperation to offset school fees and indirect costs of schooling. School grants are provided through the Ministry of Social Affairs to school children whose families earn less than 100 Egyptian pounds (US$29.41) per month. During 1996-1997, about 169,000 children received grants, either in-kind or cash, to cover the costs of school uniforms, books, supplies, and school fees. The average annual grant per child was equal to US$4.17.604 The Ministry of Education has been encouraging working children and school dropouts in rural areas to attend school by increasing the number of one-classroom schools being built.605 In the last five years, nearly 8,500 new schools have been built in poor rural communities under this program.606 The location of these new school buildings are within walking distance of many of the community homes, and an increase in the number of female teachers adds incentive for girls to continue their schooling. In addition, the Egyptian Ministry of Education provides a meal to children during the school day as an additional incentive to attend classes.607 UNICEF is building Community Schools in Egypt and over 300 are already in operation. In some communities in the north where the program is operating, girls’ enrollment has increased from 30 percent to 70 percent. Attendance rates have remained consistently high (between 95 and 100 percent), and students have performed well on national exams.608 Spending by the Government of Egypt on education ranged from between 4.4 and 4.8 percent of gross national product (GNP) from 1991 to 1995.609 According to the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)’s Statistical Yearbook for 1997 , the government dedicated 15 percent of its total expenditures to education (1990 to 1997) and the largest percentage of education spending to primary education (67 percent from 1993 to 1997).610 5. Selected Data on Government Expenditures The following bar chart presents selected government expenditures expressed as a percentage of GNP. The chart considers government expenditures on education, the military, health care, and debt service. Where figures are available, the portion of government spending on education that is specifically dedicated to primary education is also shown.611 While it is difficult to draw conclusions or discern clear correlations between areas of government expenditure as a percentage of GNP and the incidence of child labor in a country, this chart and the related tables presented in Appendix B (Tables 14 through 19) offer the reader a basis for considering the relative emphasis placed on each spending area by the governments in each of the 33 countries profiled in the report. 554 World Development Indicators 2000 . 555 The total population in 1988 was estimated to be 48.3 million. The latest census in Egypt (1996) found the population to be 61.4 million. Consecutive CAPMAS studies indicate that between 1979 and 1988, there was an increasing trend in the employment of 6- to 12-year-olds. CAPMAS. Labor Force Sample Survey (LFSS). Cairo: The Central Agency for Public Mobilizationa nd Statistics (CAPMAS), 1988, as cited in Philip L. Graitcer and Leonard B. Lerer, The Impact of Child Labor on Health: Report of a Field Investigation in Egypt , July 2000, 33 [hereinafter The Impact of Child Labor on Health ]. A UNICEF-funded survey published in 1992 found that 20 percent of all Egyptian children between the ages of 6 and 14 work. F., Nassar, Economic Aspects of Children’s Vulnerability in Egypt (Cairo: UNICEF, 1995), as cited in The Impact of Child Labor on Health at 33. 556 Al-Wafd (Egypt), issue no. 3807, 1999, as quoted in Land Center for Human Rights, Series of Reports on the Economic and Social Rights, no. 13, March 2000; Children-Labors of the Stone Crashers in Egypt at 5. Estimates from some nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) also indicate that up to 1.5 million children are working throughout the country. Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2000 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of State, 2000), Section 6d, 20 [hereinafter Country Reports 2000—Egypt ]. 557 Nadia Ramsis Farah, Child Labour in Egypt within the Context of the CRC (Cairo: Center for Development Studies, UNICEF, June 1997), 29 [hereinafter Child Labour in Egypt within the Context of the CRC ], as cited in By the Sweat and Toil of Children, vol. 5, at 42. 558 Country Reports 2000—Egypt at Section 6d. 559 The CAPMAS surveys indicate that among rural working children, 41.9 percent are 6 to 11 years old and 58.1 percent are between the ages of 12 and 14. In urban areas, however, only 32.8 percent are in the 6-11 age group, and 67.2 percent are 12-14 years old. See The Impact of Child Labor on Health at 34. 560 According to an agricultural engineer assigned to a cooperative, children are hired because they are cheaper, more obedient, and are the appropriate height for inspecting cotton plants. Human Rights Watch. Underage and Unprotected: Child Labor in Egypt’s Cotton Fields . Vol. 13, No. 1 (E) (New York: Human Rights Watch, January 2001), 10-12 [hereinafter Underage and Unprotected ]. In November of 1999, the Ministry of Social Affairs reported that 1 million children worked in this sector. Country Reports 2000—Egypt at Section 6d. See also Anthony Shadid, “Year After Tragic Deaths, Egypt’s Young Return to Cotton Fields,” Associated Press, September 24, 1998, as cited in U.S. Department of Labor, International Child Labor Program, By the Sweat and Toil of Children: Efforts to Eliminate Child Labor, vol. 5 (Washington, D.C., 1998), 18 [hereinafter By the Sweat and Toil of Children , vol. 5]. 561 Underage and Unprotected at 2. 562 The Impact of Child Labor on Health at 34. 564 Bjorne Grimsrud and Liv Jorunn Stokke, Child Labour in Africa: Poverty or Institutional Failures? The Cases of Egypt and Zimbabwe (Fafo Institute for Applied Social Science, Report No. 233, 1997), 35 [hereinafter Child Labour in Africa ]. 565 Ibid. at 35. See also Country Reports 2000—Egypt at Section 6d, 20. 566 Child Labour in Africa at 34. 567 Carpets made in family or cottage industries are generally sold to local factories. Child Labour in Africa at 33. 569 Country Reports 2000—Egypt at Section 6d. 570 Child Labour in Africa at10. 571 Salah Nasrawi, “Activists Denounce Child Labor in Egypt,” Associated Press, April 14, 2001 (http:// rmedia.boston.com/RealMedia/ads/click_lx.ads/www.boston.com/news/default/27887/TILE1/h_boscom_). 572 Child Labor News Service, “News Brief: About Ten Million Street Children in Arab World” (www.globalmarch.org/clns/clns-15-06-2001.htm). 573 USAID, GED 2000: Global Education Database [CD-ROM], Washington, D.C., 2000. 574 World Development Indicators 2000 . 575 Mona El Baradei, The Impact of Structural Adjustment and Stabilisation Policies on Educationand Health in Egypt (1994), as cited in Child Labour in Africa at 29. 576 Child Labour in Africa at 29. 578 The Impact of Child Labor on Health at 38. 580 J. L. Guirguis, “Children Work in Hazardous Jobs” (1998) [on file from International Child Labor Program, Report 5]. 581 Child Labour in Egypt within the Context of the CRC. 582 U.S. Embassy Cairo, Unclassified telegram no. 006469, October 11, 2001, [hereinafter unclassified telegram 006469]. See also Underage and Unprotected at 8. 583 Underage and Unprotected at 8. 584 Unclassified telegram 006469. See also Country Reports 2000—Egypt at Section 6d and Underage and Unprotected at 8. 585 These articles also require that the employer supply the same information to the Office of Work and Insurance. Land Center for Human Rights (LCHR), Child Workers in Egyptian Rural Areas are Victims with No Means of Redress, no. 1 (December 1997), 11 [hereinafter Child Workers in Egyptian Rural Areas ]. 586 “USAID/Egypt’s Actions/Follow-up on Child Labor” [facsimile], May 7, 2001. See also unclassified telegram, 10/11/01. 587 Child Workers in Egyptian Rural Areas at 10-11. 588 Mohamed Abd-Elkader El-Hussainy, “Child Labor: A Case Study for Greater Cairo on Car Workshops, Glass- Making and Foundries,” The Arab Republic of Egypt’s Cairo Demographic Center, March 1998, 16. 590 Unclassified telegram 006469. 591 Law No. 10 and Chapter 4 of the Penal Code of 1964. See unclassified telegram 006469, and Country Reports 2000—Egypt at Section 6f. 592 Unclassified telegram 006469. 594 Country Reports 2000—Egypt at Section 6d. 595 Interview with Sallama Shaker, deputy assistant minister, North American Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, by U.S. Department of Labor officials, May 9, 1998, as cited in By the Sweat and Toil of Children, vol. 5, at 45. 596 Country Reports 2000—Egypt at Section 6d. 597 For a list of which countries profiled in Chapter 3 have ratified ILO Conventions No. 138 and No. 182, see Appendix C. 598 Country Reports 2000—Egypt at Section 6d. 599 UNICEF, Family Development Fund Project [online], Cairo, 1996 (www.unicef.org/credit/ creegypt.htm), August 1, 2001. 600 Child Labor Coalition Notes, March 14, 2001, Washington, D.C. 601 The National Council on Childhood and Motherhood is implementing a yearlong child labor awareness-raising campaign and the rapid assessment with support from ILO-IPEC. See Agence France-Presse, “ILO Asks Egypt to Set Deadline for End of Child Labour,” April 10, 2001. 602 UNICEF reports, however, that the Egyptian Ministry of Education imposes school fees as high as 15.85 pounds (US$4.66) for primary education. Child Labour in Egypt within the Context of the CRC at 59. 603 Article 59 of the 1996 Child Law, 12. UNESCO Statistical Yearbook 1997 (Paris: UNESCO, 1997), Table 3.1 at 3-7. 604 Nadia Ramsis Farah, Child Labour in Egypt Within the Context of the Committee on the Rights of the Child (Cairo: Cairo Center for Development Studies/UNICEF, June 1997), 27. Grants fall short of the estimated costs of sending children to school, where average primary school fees range from 11.35 to 15.85 pounds (US$3.33 to $4.66), and the Ministry of Education estimates that average annual cost paid by poor families for primary school education amounts to 348 pounds (US$102.35) per child. 605 Interview with Hussein Kamel Bahaa El-Din, Minister of Education, by U.S. Department of Labor official, May 12, 1998. 608 UNICEF, Global Girls’ Education Programme: Country Highlights , World Education Forum: Dakar, 2000, at www.unicef.org/efa/firlsed.htm. 609 World Development Indicators 2000 . 610 UNESCO Statistical Yearbook 1997 and 1998 (Paris: UNESCO, 1997, 1998). 611 See Chapter 1, Section C, 5, for a fuller discussion of the information presented in the box. See also Appendix B for further discussion, and Tables 14 through 19 for figures on government expenditure over a range of years.
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