ADDIS ABABA (THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION) – Child labour has risen for the first time in 20 years, the United Nations said on Thursday (June 10), with one in 10 children in work worldwide and millions more at risk due to Covid-19.
The number of child labourers has increased to 160 million from 152 million in 2016, with the greatest rise in Africa due to population growth, crises and poverty, said the International Labour Organisation (ILO) and the UN Children’s Fund (Unicef).
“We are losing ground in the fight against child labour, and the last year has not made that fight any easier,” Unicef’s executive director Henrietta Fore said in a statement, ahead of the World Day Against Child Labour on June 12.
“Now, well into a second year of global lockdowns, school closures, economic disruptions, and shrinking national budgets, families are forced to make heartbreaking choices.”
The UN has made 2021 the International Year for the Elimination of Child Labour, saying urgent action is needed to meet a goal of ending the practice by 2025.
But major gains made since 2000 – when 246 million children were in work – are being reversed and the number could climb back to 206 million by the end of 2022 if governments introduce austerity measures or fail to protect the vulnerable, it said.
The UN said that child labourers may now be working longer hours or under worse conditions due to pandemic-related economic shocks and school closures, and many more may be forced into the worst forms of child labour.
The report highlighted an increase in the number of children aged five to 11 years in child labour, who now account for just over half of the total global figure, as well as a rise in those in hazardous work that is likely to harm their health or safety.
“This is what we have been able to measure prior to the pandemic,” Ms Claudia Cappa, one of the report’s authors and senior adviser at Unicef, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a video call from Geneva.
“If we look at the impact of Covid-19, this gives us additional reasons for concern.”
Ms Cappa said that the number of child labourers could fall by 15 million with mitigation measures, such as universal child grants, and if free and good quality schooling up until the minimum age for employment was ensured.
Increased investment in rural development and decent work in agriculture, a sector that accounts for 70 per cent of child labour, are also key, according to ILO’s director-general Guy Ryder.
“The new estimates are a wake-up call. We cannot stand by while a new generation of children is put at risk,” Mr Ryder said.
“We are at a pivotal moment and much depends on how we respond. This is a time for renewed commitment and energy, to turn the corner and break the cycle of poverty and child labour.”
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