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 Colombo Area Office 
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NOTE TO CORRESPONDENTS

INTERNATIONAL EVENTS TO MARK WORLD DAY AGAINST CHILD LABOUR
12 JUNE 2005

(ILO news) – Removing more than one million children who work in mines and quarries from one of the worst forms of child labour will be the focus of events around the world marking the World Day Against Child Labour on 12 June.

In Geneva, Switzerland, where the International Labour Organization’s annual conference is in session, the World Day will be observed on Friday, 10 June, at a special event highlighting the commitment of concerned governments and representatives of workers and employers in the mining industry to join with the ILO in inaugurating a global initiative to eliminate child labour in small-scale mines and quarries.

The World Day Against Child Labour was established by the ILO in 2002 to raise the visibility of global and local efforts against child labour and highlight the global movement to eliminate the practice, particularly its worst forms. According to the ILO, there are nearly 250 million child labourers worldwide. Approximately one million of these children work in mining and quarrying. This is considered a Worst Form of Child Labour under ILO Convention No. 182, which covers “work in hazardous environments, where children are exposed to toxic chemicals, dangerous machinery or extreme heat.” Convention No. 182, adopted in 1999, and Convention No. 138 on the Minimum Age, adopted in 1973, are among the ILO’s most widely ratified conventions.

“Children who work in mines and quarries are directly in harm’s way, risking their health and safety – and indeed their lives,” said Juan Somavia, Director-General of the ILO. “These children carry too heavy a burden. It’s up to us to lift this weight from their shoulders. We can get children out of mines and quarries and into schools.”

Nearly all children involved in small-scale mining and quarrying are in so-called artisanal work sites located in remote, hard-to-reach areas, making them difficult to regulate and hindering efforts to assist the children working there. Children as young as five can be found working in and around mines and quarries. Most often, children enter the mining and quarrying sector because they and their families are poor or because there are no educational facilities. The areas where the small-scale mines exist offer few alternatives for employment, and children are expected to share the burden of earning income for the family.

In some mines, children work as far as 90 metres beneath the ground with only a rope with which to climb in and out, inadequate ventilation and only a flashlight or candle for light. In small-scale mining, child workers dig and haul heavy loads of rock, dive into rivers and flooded tunnels in search of minerals, set explosives for underground blasting and crawl through narrow tunnels only as wide as their bodies. In quarries, children dig sand, rock and dirt; transport it on their heads or backs; and spend hours pounding larger rocks into gravel using adult-sized tools to produce construction materials for roads and buildings.

The health risks range from spinal injuries and deformities from carrying loads that are too heavy to potentially fatal rock falls and chronic diseases. These are compounded by the environmental hazards, such as the soil, water and air that may be contaminated with toxic substances like mercury or other heavy metals. Clean drinking water, health services and schools are often unavailable, especially in the more remote areas. Even where schools and clinics are available, work obligations often prevent child labourers from enjoying their benefits. In addition, such work often puts children at risk for involvement in the drug and alcohol trade and in prostitution, which are also considered worst forms of child labour under C. 182.

The ILO has set specific standards concerning mining, most recently through the Safety and Health in Mines Convention, 1995 (No.176), and Recommendation, 1995 (No.183). In 1999 and 2002, ILO tripartite meetings on mining recommended active measures against child labour in small-scale mining. Since then, the ILO’s International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC) has undertaken a number of technical cooperation projects to demonstrate how child labour in mining and quarrying can be stopped.

The ILO believes the problem of child labour in small-scale mines can be solved. The number of children involved is large but not overwhelming, and work sites, while remote , are concentrated in particular areas. IPEC’s pilot projects in Mongolia, Tanzania, Niger and the Andean countries of South America have shown that the best way to assist children in this sector is to work with the children’s own communities, improving the viability, safety and environmental sustainability of the small-scale mining economy, and improving future prospects of the children through accessible, decent schools, training and basic services.

While no empirical research has been done, anecdotal evidence in Sri Lanka suggests that older children between 14 and 18 work in sand mining. As quarrying and mining has been identified as a hazardous form of child labour and is included amongst a list of 50 hazardous forms, it is important to further establish this and take necessary action. Marking world day against child labour in Sri Lanka, the ILO sponsored a meeting for media personnel to raise awareness on child labour, especially its worst forms and hazardous forms. The media was also sensitized on the importance of child friendly reporting procedures and the penal code offences that could be committed by misreporting. A poster on the theme for this year has been reproduced in the local languages and will be distributed throughout the year.

For more information:
Shyama Salgado,
National Programme Manager : C/o ILO-IPEC Project Office,
131/4 Thimbirigasyaya Road,
Colombo 5:
Tel: 2592304/2507900
Fax: 2502692:
e-mail: slsipec@sltnet.lk