The report, published yesterday to mark Universal Day of the Child, prompted
the ILO to
call for zero tolerance of violence against children in the workplace. It
represents the UN’s most comprehensive study of the issue, the ILO said.
The hidden nature of much child labour means accurate figures can be hard to
obtain, but the report estimated that there are 218 million child labourers and
some 100 million legally employed adolescents.
Some categories of child workers are considered most vulnerable, especially
domestic workers, youth in the informal or ‘black’ economy, children in debt
bondage and modern forms of slavery, such as human trafficking. Those children
engaged in hazardous work, such as in mines, plantations or glass factories,
must put up often with lax or non-existent health and safety regulations.
ILO Director-General Juan Somavia said violence is “a terrifying fact of
daily life” for too many child labourers.
“Worldwide, violence at work is generally on the increase and violence
against children and adolescents who work is endemic, and in some cases just
‘part of the job.’ This must stop,” he said.
The report recommended a comprehensive programme of measures to tackle the
underlying economic and cultural causes of child labour and to promote education
and alternate livelihoods, as well as social mobilization to change attitudes
about violence against children in the workplace.
The International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC), the
largest single operational programme of the ILO, spent more than $70 million on
projects in 86 countries last
year.