Some 160 million boys and girls worldwide, almost one in 10, are forced into work. The majority, 112 million, or around 70 per cent, work in crop production, livestock, forestry, fisheries and aquaculture.
But with the 2025 deadline fast approaching, Mr. Qu stressed that effective action and “strong and coherent leadership from agri-food stakeholders across the globe, is critical”.
Child labour is a serious violation of human rights, FAO explained. It deprives boys and girls of their childhood, their potential and dignity, while also being harmful to their physical and mental development.
Although not all work carried out by children is considered child labour, much of it is not age-appropriate, the agency said, and many vulnerable families, especially in rural areas, have no choice.
Contributing factors include low family incomes, few livelihood alternatives, limited access to education, inadequate labour-saving technologies, and traditional attitudes surrounding children’s participation in agriculture. The COVID-19 pandemic has added to these issues.
Kailash Satyarthi, an Indian social reformer and co-recipient of the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize, along with Malala Yousafzai, spoke about the devastating impacts.
“Nothing is as brutal as the death of a child’s dream,” said Mr. Satyarthi, who campaigned against child labour in his homeland. “We should feel the moral responsibility that we have to fulfil the dreams of these children.”
The Global Solutions Forum is being held in the context of the International Year for the Elimination of Child Labour. It brings together representatives from various sectors, including government ministries, farmers' organizations, workers' groups, and development banks, businesses, as well as children, youth advocates, and former child labourers.
The event is organized by FAO alongside sister UN agency, the International Labour Organization (ILO), together with the International
Partnership for Cooperation on Child Labour in Agriculture (IPCCLA) and Alliance 8.7, a global initiative against forced labour.
In his remarks to the forum, Guy Ryder, the ILO Director General, underlined that child labour did not have to continue indefinitely.
“Child labour is not an escape road from poverty, it actually prolongs poverty; it makes poverty intergenerational. We have to help people out of this vicious circle of poverty and that’s not an easy task,” he said.
Henrietta Fore, Executive Director of the UN Children’s Fund, UNICEF, outlined some of the solutions, which involve providing income support for vulnerable families, better healthcare and education, and expanding social and child protection.
“If we want to make a difference in ending child labour, this is where we need to focus significant efforts: in rural areas, with families, where agriculture is an important source of livelihoods,” she stressed.
Participants also heard from Pope Francis, whose message was delivered by Monsignor Fernando Chica Arellano, Ambassador of the Holy See.
“Protecting children means decisive measures to support smallholder farmers, so that they are not obliged to send their children into the fields in order to increase their incomes, which, being so low, do not allow vulnerable farming families to maintain their households with dignity,” he read.
FAO is promoting efforts to boost the incomes of rural families so that they can send their children to school rather than have them work.
For example, the agency is supporting the governments of Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Lebanon, Mali, Niger, Malawi, Pakistan, Uganda and Tanzania, in addressing child labour as an integral part of national agricultural policies.
All comments [ 20 ]
A goal to stamp out child labour by 2025 is out of touch with global realities and could push many working children into worse poverty and marginalisation
urgent action was needed to meet the goal as COVID-19 puts more children at risk of underage work and threatens decades of progress.
The objective was unrealistic even before the pandemic disrupted schooling and increased hardship for millions of children around the world.
Removing them from work is no help if this drives them deeper into the famine and broken lives that the work was undertaken to mitigate
Instead of basing anti-child labour targets on “emotional and ideological convictions”, policies should consider the varied experiences and coping mechanisms of working children and their families, as well as scientific research.
The current global effort to eradicate child labor is based on the experiences of the ideal of white, Western, middle-class childhoods
It draws on the belief that children should go to school, and not participate in labour.
the reality of children’s lives in most parts of the world is not labour-free. Child labor is not necessarily bad
Appropriate work can bring educational benefits and should be encouraged, calling for long-term strategies to eliminate harmful child labour in ways that improve children’s wellbeing rather than striving for an outright ban.
Improving children’s working conditions rather than banning them from working, and ensuring access to institutional and legal support to protect them from harm and exploitation were more realistic approaches.
Eliminating child labour as a resolution without addressing fundamental structural problems of poverty and inequality will not be successful
Interventions should also be adjusted to other challenges such as climate change, which will further worsen children’s lives and conditions in the post-pandemic world
the world has already committed to eliminating child labor in all its forms by 2025 and that this is the time to ensure that we deliver on that commitment.
Although child labor has been reduced, progress can be continued; And for this, it is urgent to do more to continue successfully towards the goal.
The health crisis, the closure of schools and persistent gender inequalities have exacerbated the vulnerability of children and adolescents.
Invest more in child protection and prevent all kinds of violence, abuse and exploitation; also, to reinvent education, to improve quality and its scope.
2021 begins with an important global mobilization that focuses on the protection of the rights of children and adolescents around the world against the consequences of child and adolescent labor, especially in its worst forms.
It is a priority to ensure the adequate growth and development of children and adolescents, especially now that children and adolescents must be at the center of the priorities for action in response to and recovery from crises .
Some examples of Commitments of Action are the allocation of budgets, the formulation and approval of laws, the improvement of social protection, among other necessary and achievable measures, which will allow to give an impetus towards the V World Conference on the Sustained Eradication of Child Labor , which will be hosted by the Government of South Africa in 2022.
Civil society, including NGOs, workers' organizations, companies and the media have played a significant role in the fight against child labor, but that in post-pandemic times we should not lose all the progress and achievements made in The last decades.
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