1. Child Labor in Nepal
In 1998, the International Labor Organization (ILO) estimated that 43.3 percent
of children between the ages of 10 and 14 in Nepal were working.1167 A 1996
child labor survey conducted by Tribhuvan University’s Central Department of
Population Studies and ILO’s International Program on the Elimination of Child
Labor (ILO-IPEC) estimated 42 percent (2.6 million) of children between the
ages of 5 and 14 in Nepal were working. The survey also found that 48 percent of
girls between the ages of 5 and 14 years were working, while 36 percent of boys
in the same age group worked.1168
An overwhelming majority of working children (95 percent) participate in family-based
subsistence agriculture, while less than 1 percent work in manufacturing facilities.1169 Nepali children are known to work in the hand-knotted carpet industry,
although the number has declined significantly over the years.1170 In addition,
child workers are found in brick-kiln operations, tea shops, construction, portering,
and domestic service.1171 More than 80 percent of children working in Nepal
do not receive wages.1172 Most children who
work in urban areas have migrated from rural villages. Having been separated
from their families, they are vulnerable and often forced to work under
exploitative and hazardous conditions.1173
Although forced labor is not widespread, a system of agricultural bonded labor,
known as kamaiya , has been prevalent in the far-western and mid-western
regions of the country. One study has estimated that 33,000 children work as
bonded laborers, out of which 13,000 are thought to be kamaiya
children.1174
Nepali children are trafficked mostly for the purposes of prostitution, but
also at times for domestic service, and manual or semi-skilled labor.1175 Although
it is extremely difficult to approximate the number of children trafficked, Maiti Nepal, a local NGO, estimates
that as many as 5,000 to 7,000 Nepali girls are trafficked to India each year;
many are lured away or abducted from their homes to work in brothels.1176 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.1177
Child prostitution also occurs in urban centers like Katmandu. It is believed
that 20 percent of the prostitutes in Nepal are younger than 16 years old.1178
2. Children’s Participation in School
In 1996, the gross primary attendance rate was 104.3 percent, and the net primary
attendance rate was 66.2 percent.1179 For that same year, the gross primary
enrollment rate was 113 percent, ant the net primary enrollment rate was 79.2
percent.1180 Fifty percent of children enrolled in primary school are expected
to drop out.1181 Only 37 percent of first graders passed on to the second grade
in 1997, with the majority repeating the class or dropping out.1182
Girls make up nearly 42 percent of the students in primary school, but only
about 38 percent of the over 1 million students in secondary school.
Non-enrollment, repetition and dropout rates are consistently higher in rural
areas than in urban areas.1183
In Nepal, most children (roughly 60 percent) who work also attend school.
More working boys (70–75 percent) go to school than working girls (50–60
percent).1184
The lack of trained teachers continues to be a fundamental problem for the
country’s education system. For example, statistics show that less than half of
all primary school teachers are trained and only 38 percent of the female
primary teachers have received training.1185
3. Child Labor Law and Enforcement
The Constitution of Nepal (Article 20) prohibits the employment of minors in
factories, mines or other hazardous work.1186 Nepal has various laws that address
child labor, including the
Labor Act of 1999 and the Children’s Act of 1992, which prohibit the employment
of children under 14 years old from working in any kind of employment.1187
While the Children’s Act prohibits the employment of children in hazardous work,
there is no definition in the legislation of what constitutes hazardous work.
The restrictions on child labor do not apply to businesses with 10 or less
employees.1188
On July 17, 2000, the government declared the practice of kamaiya and
the incurrence of their debt, known as saunki , illegal.1189 The Ministry
of Land Reforms and Management (MOLRM), with technical assistance from the ILO,
drafted a Bill on the Abolition of Bonded Labour. The proposed bill provides
the legal framework for enforcement of the ban by prohibiting the inheritance of
private debt and annulling outstanding loans.1190
The 1990 Constitution (Article 20) and Nepali law prohibits trafficking. The
maximum penalty for trafficking is a prison sentence of 20 years.1191
There is no law that criminalizes prostitution or child pornography. However,
based on the Children’s Act, the Women Trafficking Act of 1986, the National
Code of 1963 and the Public Offense Act of 1971, they are considered illegal
practices.1192
Enforcement and effective implementation of child labor laws is weak, mostly
because child labor procedures, jurisdictions and penalties are inadequate and
ambiguous.1193
The Government of Nepal ratified ILO Convention No. 138 on the Minimum Age
for Employment on May 30, 1997, and ILO Convention No. 182 on the Worst Forms
of Child Labor on January 3, 2002.1194
4. Addressing Child Labor and Promoting Schooling
a. Child Labor Initiatives
Nepal became a member of ILO-IPEC in 1994. Since then, almost 12,000 working
children and their families have benefited from more than 100 ILO-IPEC action
programs and mini-programs.1195
In 2001, Nepal became one of three countries—the only one in Asia—to launch
a comprehensive Time-Bound Program aimed at eliminating the worst forms of child
labor within a specified time period. The ILO-IPEC program, funded by the U.S.
Department of Labor (USDOL) targets trafficked children and children working
in domestic labor, portering, rag picking, mines, and the carpet sector.1196
The government is currently consolidating several sectoral plans of action
against child labor to form a single master plan of action to eliminate child
labor in the next 10 years, with priority action beginning on the worst forms.1197
The Government of Nepal has drawn up a proposal for immediate action for rescue
and rehabilitation of recently freed bonded laborers. The Ministry of Land Reforms
and Management provided 60 million rupees (US$ 892,000) for fiscal year 1999/00
and 2000/01 for debt relief, housing, rehabilitation, and training of formerly
bonded child workers and their families.1198 With funding from USDOL, ILO-IPEC
launched a major project to achieve the sustainable liberation of an estimated
14,000 formerly bonded labor families, including 16,000 formerly bonded
children. The project will offer vocational training, education, legal and
counseling services, small business loans, and other support for newly freed
bonded laborers in order to prevent them from reentering exploitative forms of
labor.1199
The government has a National Plan of Action to Combat Trafficking and is in
the process of developing legislation that addresses trafficking as well as
sexual abuse of children.1200 With funding from USDOL and the technical assistance
of ILO-IPEC, the Ministry of Women and Social Affairs and the NGO Maiti Nepal
have implemented a program to eliminate trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation
of children.1201 Additionally, Nepal is one of three counties participating
in the ILO-IPEC South Asian subregional project to combat trafficking of children
for exploitative labor, also funded by USDOL.
b. Educational Alternatives
Nepal has no specific education laws. However, the government has adopted various
policies on education, including the New Education Strategy and Policy (NESP),
which provides state funding for establishing schools throughout the country.1202 Although education is not compulsory, the government provides free primary
education for all children between the ages of 6 and 12. Children up to grade
three receive books free of charge, and children from designated remote areas
receive free books up to grade five. Still, public primary schools commonly
charge non-tuition fees to offset their expenses1203
and families frequently do not have the money to pay for school supplies and
clothing.1204
With the realization that many of the country’s children, including child workers,
do not have access to adequate primary schooling, the government and NGOs have
been trying to meet the needs of many out-of-school children. The 2000-2001
federal budget calls for a 52 percent increase in government spending on education.1205 In its Ninth-Year Plan (1997-2001), the government aims to make primary
education easily accessible and compulsory and is currently implementing a pilot
program in six districts to test compulsory primary education. In order to achieve
sustainable long-term objectives, the government is working with international
donors to implement a $106 million dollar Basic and Primary Education Project
(BPEP).1206
5. Selected Data on Government Expenditures
The following bar chart presents selected government expenditures expressed
as a percentage of gross national product (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.1207
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.
1167 World Development Indicators 2000 (Washington, D.C.: World Bank,
2000).
1168 The survey was sponsored by the International Labor Organization (ILO),
Migration and Employment Survey of Nepal, Central Department of Population Studies
of Tribhuvan University, 1995-1996, Table 5.
1169 U.S. Embassy-Kathmandu, unclassified telegram no. 001216, June 9, 2000
[hereinafter unclassified telegram 6//9/00]. Nepali people are heavily dependent
on agriculture, which accounts for almost 42 percent of the country’s gross
domestic product (GDP). ILO-IPEC, Sustainable Elimination of Bonded Labor
in Nepal (Geneva, December 2000), 1 [hereinafter Elimination of Bonded
Labor in Nepal ].
1170 Unclassified telegram 001216.
1171 By the Sweat and Toil of Children: Efforts to Eliminate Child Labor,
vol. 5 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Labor, 1998), 20-29; see also (www.ilo.org/public/english/region/asro/kathmandu/projects/
child_1.htm).
1172 ILO-IPEC, “Child Labor Situation in Nepal,” fact sheet, 9.
1173 “National Plan for Immediate Action Against the Worst Forms of Child Labor
in Nepal: Summary Strategy Paper 2001-2005” (Geneva: ILO-IPEC), 3 [hereinafter
“Action Against the Worst Forms of Child Labor in Nepal.”]
1174 ILO-IPEC, “IPEC Country Profile: Nepal,” at http://www.ilo.org/public/english/standards/ipec/timebound/
nepal.pdf on 2/14/02.
1175 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2000 (Washington,
D.C.: U.S. Department of State, 2000), Section 6f [hereinafter Country Reports
2000—Nepal ].
1176 South Asian Sub-Regional Programme to Combat the Trafficking of Children
for Exploitative Employment in Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka, project document
(Geneva: ILO-IPEC, February 2000), Section 1.2.3.
1177 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 [hereinafter Nepal Implementation Report ].
1178 Country Reports 2000—Nepal at Section 6f.
1179 USAID, GED 2000: Global Education Database [CD-ROM], Washington,
D.C., 2000.
1180 World Development Indicators.
1181 Sustainable Elimination of Bonded Labor in Nepal at 1.
1182 Nepal Implementation Report at Section 1.2.1.
1183 Sustainable Elimination of Bonded Labor in Nepal at 1.
1184 Country Reports 2000—Nepal at Section 6d.
1185 MOE National Centre for Education Development, Development of Training
Package on Child Rights, Human Rights and Gender Equality for Primary School
Teachers , report to ILO-IPEC (Kathmandu, 2000), as cited in Sustainable
Elimination of Bonded Labor in Nepal at 2.
1186 National Planning Commission of Nepal, Situation Analysis of Child
Labor in Nepal (Kathmandu, July 1997), 71 [hereinafter Situation Analysis
of Child Labor in Nepal ].
1187 The Labor Act defines a minor as anyone between the ages of 14 and 18,
and the Children’s Act identifies a child as below the age of 16 years; see
Situation Analysis of Child Labor in Nepal at 70-71. See also
Yubaraj Sangroula, “Child Labor: Legislation and Enforcement Situation” (Kathmandu:
Tribhuvan University, Faculty of Law, 1997), 8-10 [hereinafter “Child Labor:
Legislation and Enforcement Situation”].
1188 Situation Analysis of Child Labor in Nepal at 71, 73.
1189 Sustainable Elimination of Bonded Labor in Nepal at 3-4.
1190 Ibid. at 3.
1191 Country Reports 2000—Nepal at Section 6f.
1192 U.S. Embassy-Kathmandu, unclassified telegram no. 001664, August 21, 2000.
1193 “Child Labor: Legislation and Enforcement Situation” at 15.
1194 For a list of which countries profiled in Chapter 3 have ratified ILO
Conventions No. 138 and No. 182, see Appendix C.
1195 ILO-IPEC Country Profile: Nepal (Geneva: ILO-IPEC, 2001), 1-2.
1196 ILO-IPEC, “Supporting the Time-Bound Programme in Nepal: The IPEC Core
TBP Project” (Geneva, September 2001), 26.
1197 “Action Against the Worst Forms of Child Labor in Nepal” at 9.
1198 “Action Against the Worst Forms of Child Labor in Nepal” at 9.
1199 Sustainable Elimination of Bonded Labor in Nepal at 28.
1200 Unclassified telegram 001216.
1201 ILO-IPEC, Setting National Strategies for the Elimination of Girls’
Trafficking and Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children in Nepal (Geneva,
1997), 1.4, 2.5.
1202 Sustainable Elimination of Bonded Labor in Nepal at 2.
1203 Ibid. at 1.
1204 Country Reports 2000—Nepal at Section 5.
1205 Unclassified telegram 001216, 6/9/00.
1206 Sustainable Elimination of Bonded Labor in Nepal at 2.
1207 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.