Government Policies and Programs to Eliminate the Worst Forms of Child Labor
The Government of Albania has been a member of ILO-IPEC since June 1999.[88] As part of a program launched in February 2001, ILO-IPEC helped establish national institutional mechanisms including a Child Labor National Steering Committee and a Child Labor Unit in the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs. ILO-IPEC is also working with the government and local organizations to initiate direct action programs to assist children on the streets, children working in agriculture, and victims of child trafficking.[89] In 2003 the government developed a new National Anti-Trafficking Strategy that, among other issues, focuses on child trafficking and prosecution of those involved. The main focus of the strategy is law enforcement, prevention, and protection, and includes the development of the Vlora Anti-Trafficking Center and the Linza Center.[90]
A UNICEF program for Child and Youth Development is working with NGOs, schools, and government agencies such as the Ministry of Education and Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs to protect at-risk children, including street children and victims of trafficking, by providing them with educational, legal, and other services.[91] In addition, IOM is implementing a counter-trafficking strategy that includes mass information campaigns, return and reintegration programs for victims, and best practices training for government personnel and related organizations involved in the counter-trafficking effort.[92] The government’s Linza Center, officially opened in 2003, offers reintegration services to trafficking victims, including children. Originally managed by the IOM, the center is now the responsibility of the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs.[93] In December 2002, the government signed a joint declaration with other Southeastern European countries to better assist victims of trafficking.[94] USAID is providing support to a project titled “Transnational Action Against Child Trafficking,” through the Swiss-based NGO Terre des hommes, in which Albanian government officials and NGO representatives work with their counterparts in Greece and Italy to identify trafficking routes, cooperate on repatriation of trafficked children, and improve care for trafficked children and their families before and after repatriation.[95]
In June 2002, the Government of Albania became eligible to receive funding from the World Bank and other donors under the Education for All Fast Track Initiative, which aims to provide all children with a primary school education by the year 2015.[96]
Incidence and Nature of Child Labor
In 2000, UNICEF estimated that 31.7 percent of children ages 5 to 14 years in Albania were working in some capacity.[97] Children, especially from the Roma community, work on the streets as beggars and vendors; other Albanian children work on farms.[98] Trafficking of Albanian children abroad to prostitution or pedophilia rings in Western Europe remains a problem. One study conducted by the Albanian “Hearth” Psycho-Social Center in 2003 estimated that 21 percent of Albanian trafficking victims were minors, between the ages of 14 and 18.[99] Boys and girls are also trafficked to Greece and Italy to participate in organized begging rings and forced labor including work in agriculture and construction.[100] In January 2003, Terre des hommes reported that the majority of children trafficked to Greece were sent with their family's knowledge to work for remuneration. In addition, the report found that 95 percent of children trafficked belong to the Roma ethnic minority or the “Egyptian” community.[101] There have been reports that children are tricked or abducted from families or orphanages and then sold to prostitution or pedophilia rings in Western Europe.[102] Children are trafficked for other forms of exploitive labor as well, such as begging and drug dealing.[103]
Education is compulsory and free for children ages 6 to 14.[104] In 2000, the gross primary enrollment rate was 107.0 percent, and the net primary enrollment rate was 97.6 percent.[105] According to UNICEF, the primary school attendance rate for all children ages 7 to 14 was 90 percent.[G1] [106] The Ministry of Education and Sciences reported that the drop-out rate from 1999 to 2000 was approximately 3 percent, although local children’s groups believe the number is higher.[107]
Child Labor Laws and Enforcement
The Labor Code sets the minimum age of employment at 16 years. Minors who are 14 years of age and older may seek employment during school holidays, but until the age of 18 they are only permitted to work in light jobs, which are determined by the Council of Ministers.[108] Labor Act No. 7724 prohibits night work by children less than 18 years of age and limits their work to 6 hours per day.[109] The Constitution forbids forced labor by any person, except in cases of execution of judicial decision, military service, or for service during state emergency or war.[110] The Labor Code also prohibits forced or compulsory labor.[111]
The Criminal Code prohibits prostitution, and the penalty is more severe when a minor girl is solicited for prostitution.[112] In January 2002, changes to the Criminal Code established penalties for trafficking of minors as well as trafficking of women for prostitution.[113] With the assistance of international donors, the government has improved its enforcement and interdiction capabilities at border crossings and at ports, resulting in several arrests of child traffickers.[114] Trafficking prohibitions, however, rarely lead to convictions of traffickers.[115]
The Government of Albania ratified ILO Convention 138 on February 16, 1998 and ILO Convention 182 on August 2, 2001.[116]
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