This chapter considers evidence from a number of countries where children
are reported to work under particularly hazardous conditions. Examples are intended
to demonstrate the scope of the global child labor problem, with emphasis placed
on the worst forms of child labor as identified under International Labor Organization
(ILO) Convention No. 182. These forms include: forced labor by children; trafficking
of children for exploitative labor; forcible recruitment of children for use
in armed conflicts; exploitation of children in the commercial sex industry;
the use of children for illicit activities such as the trafficking of drugs;
and the involvement of children in other hazardous labor that places at risk
the health, safety, and morals of children.
Under ILO Convention No. 182, ratifying countries are called upon to address
such forms of child labor as a matter of urgency. This chapter notes the commitment
that many governments are making to eliminate child labor, particularly its
worst forms. However, while the global campaign to end child labor has gained
considerable momentum over the past decade, some governments still lack the
kinds of policies and initiatives needed to protect children from being exploited
in the workplace and from suffering the worst forms of child labor.
A. The Worst Forms of Child Labor
1. Forced Labor
Children work in many countries under forced labor conditions. In some cases,
children work to pay off the debts of their parents. In other cases, bonded
labor may involve an entire family and be passed on from one generation to the
next. Children involved in forced labor lack basic freedoms, frequently work
for long hours for little or no compensation, and are generally deprived of
the opportunity to attend school.
- In Burma , forced or compulsory labor has been widely imposed on children
below the age of 18, some as young as 10 years of age. According to ILO reports, women and children
in Burma have been forced to build military camps, roads, and railways, and to
serve as sentries, porters, messengers, and even human shields and
minesweepers—sweeping roads with tree branches or brooms to detect or detonate
mines.45
- In Cambodia , children are known to work as commercial sex workers
under conditions of debt bondage to pay off loans taken out by their parents.
46 Children are also trafficked from
Cambodia , mainly to Thailand , to work as bonded laborers in the
commercial sex industry.47
- Children are reported to work under bonded conditions on cocoa farms in
Cote d’Ivoire , in many cases having been trafficked from neighboring countries.48 According to a 1998 report by a National Commission to investigate the trafficking
of Malian children to other countries, 1,500 children between the ages
of 7 to 10 years were living in work encampments in Côte d’Ivoire.49
- In India , there are reports of bonded child labor in several sectors,
including the carpet manufacturing industry,50 agriculture (particularly on
small-scale, rural farms),51 and in the
construction industry.52
- In Mauritania , despite slavery having been abolished in 1980,
allegations persist that thousands of persons, including children, work in the
country under slave-like conditions.53
- According to one study, an estimated 33,000 children work as bonded laborers
in Nepal , out of which 13,000 are thought to be kamaiya
children, a system of agricultural bonded labor.54
- In the Philippines , estimates suggest that over 300,000 children
under the age of 18 work as domestic servants, often under bonded labor
conditions.55
- In June 2001, the ILO’s Committee of Experts noted reports of boys—some as
young as five years of age—kidnapped, sold by their parents, or trafficked under
false pretenses to the
United Arab Emirates (U.A.E.), and forced to work as jockeys in camel
races.56 Children as young as 4 and 5 years old are trafficked from Bangladesh
to the U.A.E. to work as camel jockeys.57 Young boys are also known to be trafficked
from India58 and Pakistan59 to the Middle East to serve as camel jockeys.
Globally, estimates suggests that between 700,000 and one million persons,
women and children in particular, are trafficked every year for exploitative
labor, and in many cases, for the purpose of commercial sexual exploitation.
- According to some estimates, more than 20,000 women and children are trafficked
from
Bangladesh every year, many ending up in bonded labor, menial jobs, or in
prostitution.60
- Girls as young as 14 years old are kidnapped and smuggled out of Bulgaria
to destinations across Europe. Women and girls are also trafficked into
Bulgaria from the former Soviet Union and Macedonia for the purposes of
prostitution.61
- Girls from Cuba , Nigeria , and Albania , some as
young as 10 years old, are reportedly trafficked for the purpose of commercial
sexual exploitation.62
- Young boys from Pakistan are kidnapped and trafficked to countries
in the Middle East to work as camel jockeys and for purposes of sexual
exploitation, bonded labor, and domestic service.63
- In Somalia , there are reports of children trafficked for the
purpose of forced labor.64
- Girls between the ages of 12 and 18 from Burma , China and Laos
are trafficked to
Thailand to work in the commercial sex industry, some in conditions of
debt bondage.65
2. Children of War
In many areas of conflict around the world, children are involved in armed
struggles in which they are forced to serve as soldiers, scouts, messengers,
and concubines. The issue of child soldiers has captured increasing international
attention, as demonstrated by the U.N. General Assembly’s adoption of the Optional
Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict in May 2000. Around
the world, an estimated 300,000 children under the age of 18, both boys and
girls, are involved in armed conflicts in more than 30 countries. According
to some estimates, nearly half of these children are in Africa.
- In Afghanistan , there have been reports of child soldiers
participating in the struggle that has continued for over two decades in that
country.66
- Children in Angola have been used as soldiers by both the Government
and the rebel National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA).
Nearly 7,000 children are currently conscripted, some as young as 10 years
old.67
- In Burundi , children have been active in the civil war between the
Tutsi-dominated security forces and the Hutu-dominated armed opposition
groups.68
- Separatist groups in the Comoros have reportedly recruited boys between
the ages of 13 and 16 to serve as soldiers.69
- Since civil war began in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 1998,
more than 10,000 children have served in the government army or for opposition
groups.70 The Congolese Armed Forces (FAC) have recruited children as young as 13 years old.71 The FAC reportedly has targeted homeless children, forcing young boys into the army
and sexually exploiting young girls.
- Rebel forces in the Philippines have recruited children under the
age of 18 to serve in combat and non-combat situations.72
- Children have served in Rwanda ’s civil war as soldiers and as
servants for the armed forces.73
- In 2000, the ILO estimated that 5,400 children served as soldiers in
Sierra Leone.74 The RUF and other groups forced children into their ranks
to serve as soldiers, sexual slaves or to dig for diamonds in mines.
75 RUF forces forcibly injected some children with
drugs to prepare them for combat.76 During 2001, armed groups released more than 3,800 child soldiers and
camp followers. According to UNICEF, as of October 2001, approximately 1,500
children reported as missing during the war had yet to be located.77
- In Somalia , children under 15 years of age have been recruited by
the militias, with boys as young as 10 years old serving as bodyguards for
faction leaders.78
- In Sri Lanka , there are reports of boys and girls as young as 9 and
13 forcibly recruited as child soldiers with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE).79
- Children in Sudan , some as young as 10 years old, have served as
soldiers, porters, and concubines in the country’s seventeen year civil war.80
- In Uganda , there are reports of children recruited to serve as
soldiers by the Ugandan military,81 and approximately 14,000 children have been abducted
by rebel groups,82 trafficked into southern Sudan, and forced into armed conflict
in Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Uganda. These children are
used as human shields, hostages, and sometimes are coerced into sexual
activity.83
3. Commercial Sexual Exploitation
Children involved in commercial sexual exploitation face abuse and degradation.
They risk early pregnancies, sexually transmitted diseases, and exposure to
HIV-AIDS. Prostitution of children is often prevalent in urban centers, in tourist
areas, and along major transportation routes.
In some cases, children migrate to such areas in search of work, while in other
instances, children are trafficked and sold into the commercial sex sector.
- In Brazil , the sex tourism industry is reported to actively
recruit children and traffic them to other countries.84
- ILO-IPEC estimates that approximately one-third of Cambodia ’s
55,000 prostitutes are children.85 A 1997 report by the Government of Cambodia found
that of approximately 15,000 prostitutes working in brothels nationwide, 15.5
percent were children below the age of 18.86
- According to the National Institute for Children (PANI), as many as 3,000
children in Costa
Rica are involved in prostitution in metropolitan San Jose.87
- An estimated 25,000 to 30,000 children in the Dominican Republic
are involved in prostitution.88
- Children, especially girls, are known to be involved in prostitution in
El Salvador,89 where, according to a 1998
study, children between the ages of 13 and 18 account for nearly 45 percent of
the estimated 1,300 prostitutes in three major San Salvador red-light
districts.90
- In India , it is estimated that 15 percent of the country’s 2.3 million
prostitutes are children (345,000).91 A recent study by the ILO estimates that there may be between
150,000 to 200,000 Nepalese girls working as prostitutes in Indian
brothels.92
- A recent study found that an estimated 30 percent of all sex workers in
Indonesia are under the age of 18 (between 40,000 to 70,000 children).93
- In the Philippines , an estimated 60,000 children work in the
commercial sex industry, many of whom are trafficked and forced into
prostitution.94
- One nongovernmental organization (NGO) estimates that in South Africa
there are 10,000 children among the approximate 40,000 prostitutes working in
the Johannesburg area alone.95
- According to 1994 estimates from Thailand ’s Office of the National
Commission on Women’s Affairs, between 22,500 and 40,000 children are involved
in the country’s commercial sex industry.96
- In Sudan , children are reportedly sold and purchased, some in
alleged slave markets and some abducted by government or government-associated
forces for purposes of sexual slavery.97
4. Children Involved in Illicit Activities
Children in some countries are lured or forced to work in illicit activities
such as the trafficking of illegal drugs or the smuggling of goods across national
borders. These children are exposed to crime networks, violence, and the risk
of incarceration.
- Children in Pakistan are reportedly used in the smuggling of
contraband and drugs.98
- Children in Thailand are reported to be involved in the trafficking
of drugs, particularly amphetamines.99
5. Other Hazardous Forms of Child Labor
In addition to the worst forms of child labor described above, ILO Convention
No. 182 provides for a broader category of labor that includes any work that
threatens children’s physical, intellectual, and moral development. While many
activities could be considered to fall under this heading, the following examples
describe children involved in inherently dangerous work activities.
- In China , an explosion at a primary school in March 2000, caused
by high-powered explosives used to manufacture firecrackers, led to reports
that school children were being forced to produce fireworks in school
workshops. Reports indicated that teachers seeking to supplement their
salaries forced children to work without pay and set production quotas that
had to be met before the children could go home.100
- Children are also reported to work in firework production in the Dominican
Republic ,101 El
Salvador,102 Guatemala,103 India,104 and Peru.105
- According to the Colombian Institute for Family Welfare (ICBF),
approximately 1.5 million children and adolescents in Colombia under the age
of 18 worked in high-risk conditions in the year 2000.106
- In Haiti , an estimated 250,000 to 300,000 children (often girls)
work as domestic servants, or restaveks,107 often for 10 to 14 hours
per day without receiving any compensation.108 Eighty percent of these girls
are under the age of 14.109 They are sometimes sexually abused, and if
they become pregnant, are generally released to live on the streets where many
turn to prostitution.110
- In the North Sumatra region of Indonesia , boys work on fishing platforms
called jermals between 12 to 13 hours per day for periods of up to three
months in often-dangerous conditions.111 An estimated 30 percent of all sex
workers are under the age of 18 (between 40,000 to 70,000 children).112
Children who work in mining and quarrying activities are frequently engaged
in hazardous labor. They often work without protective gear and risk illness
and serious injury on a daily basis.
- In Bolivia , children participate in all aspects of small-scale,
traditional mining including the extraction of underground ore, which often
involves handling explosives for drilling and blasting operations; the crude
processing of the mineral including crushing it with hammers and heavy
machinery; and the amalgamation of the ore, which exposes the children to
mercury vapor.113
- In Madagascar , children also work under hazardous conditions in
quarries and mines.114
- In Mongolia , children work in illegal gold mining115
and in informal coal mining, both in the mines and scavenging for coal.116
- In Peru , children are found working in stone quarries,117
and in mining sites.118
- In Tanzania ’s mining regions, children work in surface and underground
mines. In gemstone mines, children known as “snake boys” crawl through narrow
tunnels hundreds of meters long to help position mining equipment and ignite
and assess the effectiveness of explosions.119
As the above examples illustrate, children work under hazardous conditions
and suffer the worst forms of child labor in countries around the world. While
the scope of the problem is great, many governments are supporting initiatives
to eliminate child labor. The next section considers several types of action
that reflect the commitment of governments to end child labor.
B. Combating Child Labor
Support for initiatives to combat the exploitation of children has grown significantly
in the past decade. To eliminate child labor, governments have developed national
plans of action and taken steps to promote the collection of child labor data,
passed child labor laws, increased access for children to schooling, and implemented
targeted interventions to remove children from exploitative work.
Since the initiation in 1992 of ILO-IPEC, 51 countries have signed memorandum
of understandings with the ILO and become members of the IPEC program. ( See
Table 1.1) The active participation of a country in IPEC includes taking
steps to increase national capacity and raise awareness as part of their participation
in the ILO’s International Program on the Elimination of Child Labor. It also
involves the establishment of a national steering committee on child labor charged
with developing a national plan of action for the progressive elimination of
child labor in the country.
Enhancing the capacity of local actors, such as NGOs and government, employer
and worker organizations, to address child labor is essential for ensuring the
sustainability of local efforts to eliminate child labor. Capacity may be built
through many means, including training of labor inspectors, involvement of local
actors in child labor coordinating committees, the direct involvement of local
organizations in the implementation of targeted strategies, and the empowerment
of local communities.
Many countries have also taken steps to collect and assess data on child labor.
Such efforts not only enhance understanding of the problem, but can contribute
to the development of more effective and efficient interventions at the country
level. Launched in January 1998, the ILO’s Statistical Information and Monitoring
Program on Child Labor (SIMPOC)120 aims to generate comprehensive quantitative
and qualitative data on child labor. The following table indicates provides
a list of countries that have worked with the ILO in collecting household-level
data on child labor, or are planning to work with the ILO to collect such data
in the future. ( See Table 1.2)


Other initiatives such as the World Bank’s Living Standards Measurement Survey
(LSMS),121 and UNICEF’s Multi-Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS)122 also provide
important sources of data related to child labor. In addition, an interagency
effort involving the participation of the ILO, UNICEF, and the World Bank aims
to enhance collection and analysis of child labor data while seeking to avoid
duplication of effort amongst these three agencies. The project, “Understanding
Children’s Work,” also seeks to identify gaps in existing data and propose ways
to fill such gaps.123
The passage of child labor laws represents another important step toward combating
the problem. Laws may prescribe at what age and under what conditions children
may work or proscribe children’s involvement in certain types of work altogether.
ILO Convention No. 182 calls upon ratifying countries to establish that some
forms of work are not appropriate for any children, under any circumstances.124 It is also important that child labor laws and basic education requirements
be complementary.125 Minimum work age laws and education requirements that
complement each other become mutually reinforcing. By contrast, when labor and
education laws conflict or leave gaps between the age when a child completes
schooling and can legally begin work, then such laws may make child labor more
likely. Regardless of how well conceived child labor laws are, however, to have
an impact, they must be properly implemented and enforced. This remains a challenge
in many countries since enforcement requires political will and the commitment
of often scarce financial and personnel resources.
A comprehensive, national child labor strategy must also consider how to improve
access for all children to quality schooling. Efforts to make basic education
universal, free, and of high quality provide children with a viable and valuable
alternative to child labor. When children attend school full time, they are
also less likely to be engaged in child labor. As this suggests, efforts to
reduce child labor and promote schooling for children can be both complimentary
and mutually reinforcing. Moreover, education represents an investment in a
child’s future and in a country’s future work force. In this way, efforts to
promote access to schooling for children can support a country’s broader economic
development and poverty alleviation goals.
The passage and enforcement of child labor laws and the promotion of schooling
for children are key strategies for reducing child labor. Eliminating child
labor, however, may also require more targeted and urgent action. This is especially
true in the case of children who are working in particularly dangerous circumstances,
as in the case of children engaged in the worst forms of child labor. Many of
the following ILO-IPEC programs supported by the U.S. Department of Labor specifically
target hazardous forms of child labor, including the worst forms of child labor
as identified in ILO Convention No. 182:
- A program in Bangladesh to prevent and eliminate the worst forms of
child labor in certain formal and informal sectors;
- A program to prevent and eliminate child labor in 10 hazardous sectors in
India;126
- Projects in Nepal to remove children from bonded labor and to eliminate
trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation of girls;
- A South Asia sub-regional program to combat the trafficking of children for
exploitative employment in Bangladesh , Nepal , and Sri Lanka
;
- A project in Thailand to prevent children from being forced into prostitution;
- Projects to combat child labor in the fireworks sectors of El Salvador
and Guatemala ;
- A program to address the exploitation of children working as domestic servants
in Haiti ;
- Programs to prevent and eliminate child labor in small-scale traditional
mining in
Colombia , Bolivia , Ecuador , and Peru ;
- A program to combat child prostitution in Brazil and Paraguay
;
- A regional project to assess the problem of child soldiers in four countries
in Central Africa ( Burundi , the Republic of Congo , the Democratic
Republic of Congo , and
Rwanda ) and identify strategies to address the issue; and
- A nine country regional IPEC project in West and Central to address the trafficking
of children for exploitative labor in Benin , Burkina Faso ,
Cameroon , Gabon , Ghana ,
Cote d’Ivoire , Mali , Nigeria , and Togo .
Removing children from exploitative work, however, is only one part of addressing
the problem of child labor. Steps also need to be taken to ensure that children
removed from one form of work do not merely enter another, possibly worse, form
of child labor. Programs need to provide children with better alternatives once
they leave child labor situations. Reducing a household’s dependence on income
earned through the labor of children is another critical step toward reducing
the incidence of child labor. A number of the initiatives highlighted in the
next chapter involve providing families of former working children with income
generating opportunities. Others involve increasing the availability of credit
facilities for poorer households.
Another indication of a country’s commitment to ending child labor is the ratification
and implementation of international standards, such as the ILO’s two core conventions
on child labor—ILO Convention No. 182 on the Worst Forms of Child Labor and
ILO Convention No. 138 on Minimum Age for Employment Ratification. These two
conventions have already been ratified by over 65 percent of the ILO’s 175 member
countries.
ILO Convention No. 182 calls on countries to take steps to eliminate the worst
forms of child labor as a matter of urgency. Three countries have already taken
steps in this direction. In 2001, the governments of El Salvador, Nepal and
Tanzania officially launched comprehensive, national programs aimed at eliminating
the worst forms of child labor in a set time frame. These “Time-Bound Programs”
also seek to integrate strategies for child labor elimination into broader national
policies on development, education and poverty alleviation.
C. Evidence from 33 Countries
As the examples in this chapter suggest, child labor is a problem that touches
countries around the world. The next chapter of this report takes a closer look
at the child labor situation in 33 countries. These are countries where child
labor has been identified as a serious problem, but in many cases, they are
also examples of countries where innovative initiatives are being undertaken
to address the problem. The 33 countries in the following chapter were not
chosen because they are the worst offenders. Rather, these are countries for
which sufficient information was available to present a detailed picture of
the many forms child labor can take and the variety of strategy that can be
utilized to address the problem.
45 In November 2001, the governing body of the International Labor Organization
(ILO) reported the continued incidence of bonded labor by children in Burma.
See “Developments Concerning the Question of the Observance by the Government
of Myanmar of the Forced Labour Convention, 1930 (No. 29),” Report of the High-Level
Team (HLT) (Geneva: International Labor Office (ILO), November 2001); see also
Forced Labour in Myanmar (Burma) , report of the Commission of Inquiry
appointed under Article 26 of the Constitution of the International Labor Organization
to examine the observance by Myanmar of the Forced Labour Convention, 1930 (No.
29) (Geneva: ILO, July 2, 1998); Report on Labor Practices in Burma (Washington,
D.C.: U.S. Department of Labor, September 1998), Chapter 4; and 2000 Report
on Labor Practices in Burma (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Labor,
February 2000), 55-60.
46 Government of Cambodia, Ministry of Planning, Cambodia Human Development
Report 2000: Children and Employment (Phnom Penh, 2000), 37.
47 Ibid. at 38; see also Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection
Act 2000: Trafficking in Persons Report (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department
of State, July 2001) [hereinafter Trafficking in Persons Report ], 35.
48 Sudarsan Raghavan and Sumana Chatterjee, “A Taste of Slavery,” Knight Ridder,
June 24, 2001. For the full text of this series of articles, see http://web.krwashington.com/content/krwashington/2001/06/24/washington/Slavery-
MainIndex.htm. In response to these reports, the Chocolate Manufacturers Association
and the World Cocoa Foundation signed a protocol in October 2001 by which they
committed themselves to work with the ILO, U.S. Agency for International Development
(USAID), and other major stakeholders on “a joint action program of research,
information exchange, and action to enforce internationally recognized and mutually-agreed
upon standards to eliminate the worst forms of child labor in the growing and
processing of cocoa beans and their derivative products.” See “Protocol
for the Growing and Processing of Cocoa Beans and Their Derivative Products
in a Manner that Complies with ILO Convention 182 Concerning the Prohibition
and Immediate Action for the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labor,”
Chocolate Manufacturers Association, Vienna, Virginia, October 1, 2001.
49 Sory Ibrahim Guindo, “Rapport d’étape sur le trafic d’enfants maliens: Plus
de 1,500 mineurs recensés en Côte d’ Ivoire,” Liberté, December 21, 1998.
50 By the Sweat and Toil of Children: The Use of Child Labor in U.S. Agricultural
Imports and Forced and Bonded Child Labor , vol. 2, 85-94 [hereinafter By
the Sweat and Toil of Children, vol. 2]; By the Sweat and Toil of Children:
Consumer Labels and Child Labor, vol. 4, at 19-22.
51 By the Sweat and Toil of Children, vol. 2, at 125-32. Bonded labor
in the farm sector occurs when landless peasants and tenant farmers must turn
to landlords for loans in the form of cash or food, to be repaid with labor.
Instead of decreasing with the time worked, however, the loans often increase,
and bondage becomes a way of life for generations.
52 Isabel Austin, UNICEF state representative for Tamil Nadu and Kerala, interview
with U.S. Department of Labor official, May 5, 1998 [hereinafter Austin interview].
A 1996 Human Rights Watch report found bonded child labor in the agricultural
and silk industries as well as in the production of bidis, carpets, silver,
synthetic gemstones and leather products; see The Small Hands of Slavery:
Bonded Child Labor in India (Human Rights Watch, September 1996), available
at www.hrw.org/hrw/reports/1996/India3.htm. See also Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices for 2000 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of State, 2001)
[hereinafter Country Reports 2000 ].
53 Kevin Bales, Disposable People (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University
of California Press, 1999), Chapter 3; BBC News Online, “World: Africa
Award for Mauritanian Anti-Slavery Activist,” available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/africa/newsid_216000/216539.stm;
Douglas Farah, “Despite Legal Ban, Slavery Persists in Mauritania,” Washington
Post, October 21, 2001 [hereinafter “Slavery Persists in Mauritania”]; “Slavery
Lives on in Mauritania: Tradition Thrives Thanks to a Confluence of Cultures,”
National Public Radio, August 21, 2001, available at www.npr.org/programs/specials/racism/010828.mauritania.html,
as cited on December 4, 2001; Kendall Wilson, “Slavery Thrives in African Nation,”
Philadelphia Tribune , June 25, 1999, 1A; “Mauritania: Paradise under
the Master’s Foot: An 800-Year-Old System of Black Chattel Slavery Thrives in
Mauritania”; Country Reports 2000—Mauritania ; “Slavery Persists in Mauritania.”
54 ILO-IPEC, “Child Bonded Labour: Nepal,” Child Bonded Labour, September 1999.
55 Country Reports 2000—Philippines at Section 6c.
56 ILO, Report of the Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions
and Recommendations, 89 th Session 2001 (Geneva: ILO, 2001), 566-67. For
comments in response to the Report of the Committee of Experts on the Application
of Conventions and Recommendations , see Government of the United
Arab Emirates (UAE) and the UAE worker and employer members, International
Labour Conference Provisional Record, Eighty-ninth Session , No. 19, Part
2 (Geneva: ILO, 2001), 83-84.
57 U.S. Embassy-Abu Dhabi, unclassified telegram no. 003162, May 29, 2000.
58 Country Reports 2000—India at Section 6d.
59 Trafficking in Persons Report at 92.
60 Country Reports 2000—Bangladesh at Section 6f.
61 Bulgaria is both a source and a transit country for human trafficking. Approximately
10,000 Bulgarian women, many under the age of 18, may be involved in international
operations, but no official statistics are available. See IOM Counter Trafficking
Strategy for the Balkans and Neighboring Countries, International Organization
for Migration, January 2001, available at http://www.iom.int/PDF_Files/Balkan_strategy.pdf,
as cited on September 28, 2001. See also Country Reports 2000—Bulgaria
.
62 Graham Johnson and Nyra Mahmood, “Sell Kids for Sex: Sick Traffickers Offering
Girls of 11 for 500…to Turn into Prostitutes,” Sunday Mirror (London),
January 6, 2002, 8, 9.
63 Trafficking in Persons Report at 92.
64 Country Reports 2000—Somalia .
65 Country Reports 2000—Thailand at Section 6f.
66 Hannah Beech Farkhar, “The Child Soldiers: War and Revenge Is All the Young
Recruits of the Northern Alliance and Taliban Know,” Time [online], November
16, 2001, available at www.time.com/time/world/article/ 0,8599,182805,00.html.
67 The use of child soldiers is a significant and ongoing problem in Angola.
In March 1996, the U.N.’s Department of Humanitarian Affairs surveyed 17,000
demobilized soldiers in just 4 of 15 demobilization centers and found that more
than 1,500 were under 18 years of age. Sources for the Coalition to Stop the
Use of Child Soldiers report that 3,000 children are active in the Angolan armed
forces, and another 3,000 are active with UNITA, despite efforts to demobilize
8,500 children following the 1994 peace agreement. The U.S. Department of State
reports that children as young as 10 are recruited or forcibly conscripted by
UNITA. See Country Reports 2000—Angola . See also Coalition to
Stop the Use of Child Soldiers, Angola Country Report, available at
www.child-soldiers.org/embargo/ donotpublish/globalreport.html#.
68 Country Reports 2000—Burundi at 703. See also “Child Soldiers
Global Report: Burundi,” available at www.child-soldiers.org/report2001/countries/burundi.html.
69 Summary Record of the 666 th Meeting: Comoros, U.N.
Document No. CDC/C/SR.666 (Geneva: United Nations Committee on the Rights of
the Child, October 4, 2000), para. 41. See also Coalition to Stop the
Use of Child Soldiers, Africa Report: Comoros (London: Coalition to Stop
the Use of Child Soldiers, March 1999).
70 Christian Aid, Oxfam GB, and Save the Children U.K., “No End in Sight: The
Human Tragedy of the Conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo: August
2001,” June 8, 2001, available at www.oxfam.org.uk/policy/papers/ drc2.htm,
as cited on October 26, 2001.
71 Country Reports 2000—Democratic Republic of the Congo . The U.N.
Committee on Rights of the Child notes that “in some cases, the age of a child
was falsified and children as young as 13 were recruited as soldiers.” See
United Nations, Committee on Rights of the Child, Committee on Rights
of the Child Starts Consideration of Report of Democratic Republic of the Congo
, 27th session, May 28, 2001, available at www.unhchr.ch/huricane/ huricane.nsf/view01/D33F9C5FC1976910C1256A5B0057D64A?opendocument.
72 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2000 (Washington, D.C.:
U.S. Department of State, 2000), Section 3.
73 UNICEF, press release (http://unicef.org/newsline/01pr69.htm). See also
Worst Forms of Child Labour Data: Rwanda (www.globalmarch.org/worstformsreport/world/rwanda.html).
74 Sierra Leone: The Terrible Price of Poverty and Unemployment , International
Labor Organization, World of Work, No. 33, February 2000 (www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/inf/magazine/33/sleone.htm).
October 17, 2001. Human rights groups estimate that 4,500-10,000 children under
16 years of age were forcibly abducted into military service during the war.
Douglas Farah, “Children Forced to Kill,” Washington Post , April 10,
2000.
75 Child Soldiers Global Report, Republic of Sierra Leone, Country Reports
on Human Rights Practices for 2000 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of State,
2000); Douglas Farah, “Rebels in Sierra Leone Mine Diamonds in Defiance of U.N.
Captured Children and Conscripts Used as Laborers,” Washington Post
, August 19, 2001, A01.
76 “Brutal Child Army Grows Up,” BBC News Online , see (http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/africa/
newsid_ 743000/743684.stm). Around the world, an estimated 300,000 children
under the age of 18, both boys and girls, are involved in armed conflicts in more than 30 countries, nearly half of which
are believed to be with militaries or armed opposition groups in Africa. For
information on global figures on the incidence of child soldiers, see “Child
Soldiers Global Report 2001,” The Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers
(www.child-soldiers.org/). See also : Douglas Farah, “Children Forced
to Kill,” Washington Post , April 10, 2000.
77 UNICEF Press Release, UNICEF Encouraged By the Releasee Today of 150 Child
Soldiers in Sieraa Leone, Freetown/New York, 4 th June 2001. (www.unicef.org/newsline/01prjune4cs/htm)
October 17, 2001 (3:47PM).
78 Situation of Human Rights in Somalia: Report
of the Special Rapporteur, Ms. Mona Rishmawi, Submitted in Accordance with Commission
of Human Rights Resolution 1999/75 , U.N. Document No. E/CN.4/2000/110 (Geneva:
United Nations Economic and Social Council, January 2000) 17. See also
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2000 (Washington, DC: U.S. Department
of State, 2001).
79 Global Report on Child Soldiers—Sri Lanka (www.child-soldiers.org/report2001/
countries/sri_lanka.html). See Also Sri Lanka: Recent Reports on Child
Labor Problems Which Violate ILO Convention 182 on the Worst Forms of Child
Labor. [E-mail Correspondence (need date), Sonia Rosen, Solidarity Center].
U.S. Embassy-Colombo, unclassified telegram no. 001719, September 26, 2001.
80 “Child Soldiers Global Report: Sudan” (www.child-soldiers.org/report2001/countries/sudan.html).
81 Child Soldier Global Report 2001-Uganda, Coalition to Stop the Use of Child
Soldiers (http://www.child- soldier.org/report2001/countries/uganda/html).
82 The rebels are associated with the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) and the
Allied Democratic Forces (ADF). See Tom Barton, Alfred Mutiti and the
Assessment Team for Psycho-social Programmes in Northern Uganda, Northern
Uganda Psycho-Social Needs Assessment (Kisubi, Uganda: Marianum Press, 1998)
vii-viii.
83 Tom Barton, Alfred Mutiti and the Assessment Team for Psycho-social Programmes
in Northern Uganda, Northern Uganda Psycho-Social Needs Assessment (Kisubi,
Uganda: Marianum Press, 1998) vii-viii. See also “Victims of Trafficking
and Violence Protection Act 2000: Trafficking in Persons Report (Washington,
D.C.: U.S. Department of Labor, 2001).
84 CECRIA website at Section 1.2.5. See also : Country Reports on
Human Rights Practices for 1999—Brazil (Washington, D.C.:U.S. Department
of State, 2000), 28.
85 Interview with Mar Sophea, national program manager, ILO-IPEC Cambodia,
by U.S. Department of Labor official, October 17, 2000.
86 Report on the Problem of Sexual Exploitation and Trafficking in Cambodia
(Phnom Penh: Commission on Human Rights and Reception of Complaints of the National
Assembly, May 1997), 2, 6. The commission noted that this was a minimum estimate,
as it did not cover all districts or include commercial sex workers employed
in other venues such as massage parlors and karaoke bars.
87 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 1999 (Washington, D.C.:U.S.
Department of State, 2000), Section 5.
88 World Congress Against Commercial Sexual Exploitation, August 1996, and
Mainstreaming Gender in IPEC Activities 1999, as cited in “Worst Forms of Child
Labor Data: Dominican Republic,” The Global March Against Child Labor
(www.globalmarch.org/worstformofchild labour/dominican-republic.html). Another
source cites a figure of 25,000 boys, girls, and adolescents working in the
country’s commercial sex sector. See Mercedes González, “La explotación
sexual y laboral de niños,” El Siglo, August 20, 2000.
89 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 1999—El Salvador (Washington,
D.C.:U.S. Department of State, 2000), Section 6c. [hereinafter Country Reports
1999—El Salvador ].
90 According to a 1998 study on child prostitution conducted by the Commission
on the Family, the Woman, and the Child by the United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights, among the major factors contributing to children engaging
in prostitution are poverty, a lack of a strong nuclear family, discrimination
against women, and organized crime; see Country Reports 1999—El Salvador
at Section 5.
91 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2000—India (Washington,
D.C.: U.S. Department of State, 2001), Section 6d.
92 ILO-IPEC, Time-Bound Pamphlet on Nepal, 2001. Of those girls who are rescued
or are able to return to their villages from India, a sample study found that
37 percent were infected with HIV. ILO-IPEC, Nepal Implementation Report
, 1998-1999, Section 1.2.3.
93 Mohammad Farid, “Sexual Abuse, Sexual Exploitation, and the Commercial Sexual
Exploitation of Children,” in Irwanto, Mohammad Farid, and Jeffry Anwar, Situational
Analysis of Children in Need of Special Protection in Indonesia (Jakarta:
CSDS Atma Jaya, Department of Social Affairs, and UNICEF, 1998), 96-97.
94 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2000-Philippines (Washington,
D.C.: U.S. Department of State, 2000), Section 3.
95 U.S. Embassy-Johannesburg, unclassified telegram no. 0655, June 21, 2000.
96 Estimates of children working in prostitution vary greatly. Herve Berger
and Hans van de Glind, Children in Prostitution, Pornography and Illicit Activities
: Thailand (Bangkok: ILO-IPEC, August 1999) 7.
97 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2000—Sudan (Washington, D.C.:
U.S. Department of State, 2000) 822. See also U.S. Embassy-Nairobi, unclassified
telegram no. 01479, March 12, 2001.
98 Interview with Dr. Zafar Mueen Nasir, senior research economist, Pakistan
Institute of Development Economics, by U.S. Department of Labor official, July
24, 2000.
99 Dr. Somphon Chitradub, Child Labour in the Trafficking of Drugs in Thailand:
An ILO-IPEC Southeast Asia paper (Bangkok: ILO-IPEC, 1999) 2-3.
100 Craig Smith, “Chinese Premier Apologizes for Schoolhouse Explosion,”
New York Times ( March 15, 2001); and John Pomfret and Philip P. Pan, “Forced
Child Labor Behind Deadly Explosion in China,” Washington Post (March
7, 2001). See also Rupert Wingfield-Hays, “China Blast Toll Rises,” South
China Morning Po st (March 9, 2001); Frank Lagfitt, “China Leader
Admits Kids Made Fireworks but Premier Asserts Practice Was Stopped After Earlier
Blast,” Baltimore Sun ( March 16, 2001); Ching-Ching Ni, “Forced Child
Labor Turns Deadly in China’s Needy School System,” Los Angeles Times, March
9, 2001.
101 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 1999—Dominican Republic
(Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of State, 1999), Section 6d (www.state.gov/www/global/human_rights/1999_hrp_report/
domrepub.html).
102 U.S. Embassy-El Salvador, unclassified telegram no. 5508, February 1998.
103 In Guatemala , between 3,000 and 5,000 children are employed in
the fireworks industry. Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2000,
Guatemala (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of State, 2001), Section 6d.
104 Jill McGivering, “Festival of lights without fireworks,” (http://news6.thdo.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/
world/ south%5Fasia/newsid%5F990000/990606.stm) (Wednesday, 25 October, 2000,
23:28 GMT 00:28 UK).
105 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 1999—Peru (Washington,
D.C.: U.S. Department of State, 1999). (www.state.gov/www/global/human_rights/
1999_hrp_report.), Section 6d.
106 “Sistema de Información ICBF,” (http://www.icbf.gov.co/espanol/estadisticas.asp).
107 UNICEF, The State of the World’s Children , 1997 (New York:
UNICEF, 1996) 30. See also , “Haiti faces major education challenge,”
UNICEF Information Newsline, www.unicef.org/newsline/99pr16.htm
108 National Coalition for Haitian Rights , “ Helping Child Servants
Who are Virtual Slaves ” (www.unicef.org/ media/storyideas/946.htm, updated:
November 30, 2000) October 26, 2001.
109 UNICEF, The State of the World’s Children , 1997 (New York:
UNICEF, 1996) 30. See also , “Haiti faces major education challenge,”
UNICEF Information Newsline, www.unicef.org/newsline/99pr16.htm
110 Statement by Jean Robert Cadet on Restavek Servitude before the
United Nations Commission on Human Rights, Sub-Commission on the Promotion and
Protection of Human Rights Working Group on Contemporary Forms of Slavery, 25
th Session (Geneva: June 2000) [document on file].
111 ILO-IPEC Programme
to Combat Child Labor in the Fishing Sector in Indonesia and the Philippines
(Phase 1) project document (Geneva: ILO, 1999) 2-3.
112 Mohammad Farid, “Sexual Abuse, Sexual Exploitation, and the Commercial
Sexual Exploitation of Children,” in Irwanto, Mohammad Farid, and Jeffry
Anwar, Situational Analysis of Children in Need of Special Protection in
Indonesia (Jakarta: CSDS Atma Jaya, Department of Social Affairs, and UNICEF,
1998) 96-97.
113 ILO-IPEC, Program to Prevent and Progressively Eliminate Child Labor
in Small-Scale Traditional Gold Mining in South America, ILO-IPEC project
document, March 9, 2000, 3 [document on file].
114 U.S. Embassy – Antananarivo, unclassified telegram no. 001787, 2 October
2001.
115 Mongolmaa, Update of the Situational Analysis on Child Labour in Mongolia
– draft report (Ulaan Baatar, Mongolia: ILO/IPEC, 2001) 20-22.
116 Mongolmaa, Update of the Situational Analysis on Child Labour in Mongolia
– draft report (Ulaan Baatar, Mongolia: ILO/IPEC, 2001) 18-19.
117 U.S. Department of State Human Rights Report for 1999. (www.state.gov/www/global/human_rights/
1999_hrp_report.), Section 6d.
118 ILO-IPEC. Children Working in Small-Scale Traditional Gold Mining in
Peru: National base-line study for the Project for Prevention and Progressive
Elimination of Child Labor in Small-Scale Traditional Gold Mining in South America.
Maria del Carmen Piazza. March 2001. 80 – 83.
119 Situation Analysis Report on Hazardous Child Labor in the Three Sectors:
Plantations and Agriculture, Domestic and Allied Workers Union, and Tanzania
Mining and Construction Workers Union (Dar es Salaam, Tanzania Federation
of Free Trade Unions (ILO-IPEC, 1997) 10.
120 For more information about ILO-IPEC’s SIMPOC program, see (www.ilo.org/public/english/standards/ipec/
simpoc/index.htm).
121 For more information about the World Bank’s LSMS program, see (www.worldbank.org/lsms/).
122 For more information about UNICEF’s MICS program, see (www.childinfo.org/MICS2/Gj99306m.htm).
123 The Inter-Agency Research Cooperation Project: Developing New Strategies
for Understanding Children’s Work and Its Impact involves the active participation
of three agencies: the International Labor Organization, Unicef and the World
Bank. The project aims “to improve child labour research, data collection and
data analysis; to enhance local and national capacity for child labour data
collection and research; and to improve the assessment of existing interventions
in this field.” See (www.ucw-project.org/) as accessed on August 16,
2001.
124 See Articles 1 and 3 of ILO Convention No. 182. For full text of
ILO Convention No. 182, see Appendix E.
125 ILO Convention No. 138 emphasizes this point in Article 2, paragraph 3,
which states, “The minimum age specified in pursuance of paragraph 1 of this
Article shall not be less than the age of completion of compulsory schooling
and, in any case, shall not be less than 15 years.” For full text of convention,
see Appendix F.
126 Targeted sectors include: bidis , brassware, bricks, fireworks,
footwear, glass bangles, locks, matches, stone quarries, and silk. The project
will also include a review of existing efforts underway in the carpet industry.
It is scheduled to begin in January 2002. “Preventing and Eliminating Child
Labour in Identified Hazardous Sectors.” (Geneva: ILO-IPEC, September 2001).