In
today’s volatile world, more than 100 million people are in an urgent need of
humanitarian assistance, of which 50 percent are children. More than 60 million
people have been displaced and are facing extreme situations due to conflict,
emergencies and natural disasters. Some of the major consequences of these are
mass displacement, separation of families, loss of parents, lack of
opportunities in the formal labour market, increased poverty, and greater
chances of children going missing and becoming invisible. Prone to more
vulnerability, children in such delicate times remain the worst sufferers who
continue to be attacked, used as combatants, abused physically and sexually,
raped and forced into some of the most abusive forms of work such as sex
slavery and soldiering. UNICEF estimates that 50-60% of the population affected
by disasters is children and nearly a billion children live in countries that
were affected by conflict in 2013 or 2014 alone. However, lack of basic
preparedness standards during natural or man-made disasters, and the emergency
preparedness plans that do exist, have often failed to address the needs of the
children, hence intensifying the need for child-friendly crisis plans and
policies.
Given
the mentioned backdrop, in the absence of educational systems for children, due
to legal and social barriers to employment for adults and cultural
inappropriateness for women to work, millions of children go missing into the
shackles of bonded or forced labour in the hopes that resources gained will
enable other family members to survive. Moreover, there are a large number of
children that migrate unaccompanied and eventually find themselves in the worst
forms of child labour. These children who are breadwinners of their families or
who are trafficked and forced into slavery, are often labelled as ‘invisible or
missing children’.
Due
to the ongoing conflict in Syria, it is estimated that 1 in 10 Syrian refugee
children in the region are engaged in child labour. Children affected by the
conflict are at serious risk of becoming trafficked, abused, exploited, raped
and in some cases beaten to death. Millions are out of school and it is feared
that Syria is losing a whole generation of its youth. Nearly 5 years into the Syrian war, some 4
million Syrian and host community children and youth aged 5-17 years are in
need of education assistance, including 2.1 million out-of-school children
inside Syria and 700,000 Syrian children in Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and
Egypt. But with no political solution in sight to one of the most brutal
conflicts the world has seen in decades, the number of children missing out on
an education continues to climb. It is no co-incidence that the countries with
the highest numbers of child labourers-Afghanistan, Nigeria and Pakistan that
have been affected by longstanding conflict and emergency situations-are also
the countries with the highest out of school populations.
Comparative
analysis between war‐affected and non‐war‐affected regions done by ILO reveals
that child economic activity is higher in the war‐affected regions than in the
regions that enjoyed relative security. A recent analysis further emphasises
that adolescents, specifically girls, are the age group that is most frequently
missed by international assistance. Therefore it is not an understatement to
say that without targeted national and international efforts, children and
adolescents will continue to face barriers and miss out on education, miss out
on social protection and remain at risk of being abused, injured and face
death, during conflicts and emergencies.
It cannot be false to say that these problems are intensified by the
absence of a strong and effective child protection system, including the lack
of policies backed by adequate resources, capacity and measures to improve
child protection in emergencies.
It is important to note that true
prevalence of child labour is always higher than what is reported. Because
child labour is illegal in many countries, refugee families and employers in
the host countries often hide the practice for fear of legal consequences. It
is often difficult to track the occurrence of child labour in such situations
as many children are engaged in irregular, short-term jobs that change daily
and in unpaid work. Also because of the frequent movement of the refugees,
children engaged in work go unnoticed.
Nearly a year ago the world witnessed
another grave emergency in Nepal as two
earthquakes killed an estimated 8,500 people and injured another 20,000 in
Nepal. An estimated 12,000 Nepalese children are trafficked every year, but
since the two catastrophic earthquakes, the threat of child rights abuses with many reported cases
of trafficking, child marriage, child labour and violence against children is
said to be even higher.
According to a
recent report from the European Union’s intelligence agency, nearly 10,000
refugee children have gone missing- many being feared to have fallen in the
hands of organised trafficked syndicates.
Education
is a proven strategy to reduce and eliminate child labour and violence against
children in crisis situations. Education is a necessary tool to break the cycle
of poverty faced by displaced children. However, despite several emergency
situations that the world has seen, the financing for education along with
financing for children specifically remains low, leaving millions of children
without any hope for their future.
The
Secretary-General’s Report on World Humanitarian Summit, that is going to be
held in Mat in Istanbul, turkey this year,
brings some optimism, as he focuses on the fact that now every country
should have inclusive national developmental strategies, laws, economic and
social policies and safety nets to protect and respect all vulnerable people
including children.
The
adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals in September 2015, wherein world
leaders committed to ensuring inclusive and quality education, eliminating
forced labour, modern slavery, human trafficking and ending all forms of
violence against children represented in Goal 4, 8.7 and 16.2, provides the
impetus to this bold ambition. It is now a legal and moral responsibility of
the heads of states, global leaders in business, NGOs and people affected by
crises to create a more humane world and ensure no one is left behind and
those furthest behind are reached first.
Global
March Against Child Labour works to advocate for rights of vulnerable children
engulfed in the cruelties of war, disasters and emergencies. We believe that
every child has a right to a safe environment and a happy childhood- free of
abuses and exploitation.
Therefore
in our engagements with partners, world leaders, NGOs, Governments and people
like you, we stress on the fact that humanitarian response mechanisms that the
world currently is used to, during the times of emergencies, needs reform and
greater inclusion of child protection measures and targeted programmes to
eliminate child labour, child slavery and child trafficking.
While
you and your child may feel secure right now, there are millions of children
who feel the opposite due to the harsh circumstances they are facing. You and
we together can make a difference to the lives of such children, by only
raising our voices and concerns about them. Join our efforts to talk more and
more about greater inclusion of child labour in humanitarian assistance efforts
and need for proper child protection measures for prevention of worst forms of
child labour in the fragile states and the countries hosting refugees.
You
can join our movement by copy pasting the following line in your
Facebook/Twitter Feed and tag us and World Humanitarian Summit in the same.
Facebook:
“Greater inclusion of child slavery, child trafficking and prevention of worst
forms of child labour is needed in humanitarian response mechanism.” Global
March Against Child Labour WHSummit
Twitter:
““Greater inclusion of child slavery, child trafficking and prevention of worst
forms of child labour is needed in humanitarian response mechanism.”
@kNOwchidlabour @WHSummit
Every voice raised for the rights of children is a movement in itself. By speaking more and more about children's rights we can ensure that the concerned authorities are listening and we cannot do this without you.
Every voice raised for the rights of children is a movement in itself. By speaking more and more about children's rights we can ensure that the concerned authorities are listening and we cannot do this without you.
Child labor
ReplyDelete