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HELSINKI WORKSHOP
Child labour a ‘necessary evil’ in
poor states
“Child labour is evil,” says Aimé Bada, a defender of
minors’ rights from Senegal. “But it is a necessary evil, because
without the income the children earn in the poorest countries of the
world, their families would be worse off.” Bada knows what he is talking
about. He spent his childhood earning to pay family bills; he had to. He
has now become an advocate of children’s rights, and in that he includes
the right to work. Bada told a workshop on child labour in Helsinki that
children must be given the right to define the terms of the work they
have to perform, and protected from abuses by employers, both at the
domestic and the corporate level.
The workshop he addressed was held in the framework of
the Helsinki Process, a North-South dialogue on new approaches to
resolve global problems launched by the Finish and the Tanzanian
governments in December 2002. Bada called for a radical reform of
institutional education in developing countries, especially in Africa.
“School must be reformed to allow children to work at the same time that
they are learning,” he said. “School must respect African oral teaching
traditions, and incorporate in its programmes the learning of
professional skills, as well as ways of conduct that allow children to
become worthy citizens.” Unexpectedly, perhaps, many participants
agreed.
“Condemning child labour is silly and unproductive,”
Päivi Mattila, social scientist at the University of Helsinki who has
done extensive research on child labour in Asian, Latin American and
African countries, told IPS. The International Labour Organisation has
set standards to prevent child labour, and the United Nations has long
ago passed a convention on the rights of the child, she said. “Still,
children in India, the Philippines, Brazil, and in Senegal, continue
working.” If child labour is to be reduced and eventually eliminated,
schools must be improved dramatically, she said. “School would only
become an alternative for poor children in the developing world when it
begins to provide education useful for real life.”
Institutional education must include training in
skills such as auto mechanics, electronics and carpentry, she said. “And
such teaching must reduce gender discrimination. It cannot be that girls
always learn cosmetics or cooking, while boys always go to the carpentry
or mechanics courses.” Unicef says up to 250 million children from
developing countries are working, about half of them full time.
Julio Godoy
Dawn/Inter-Press News Service
9 September 2005
http://www.dawn.com/2005/09/09/int15.htm
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