Fight child labour amid Covid
By Phillo Aryatwijuka.
Let’s fight Child
Labour during the COVID -19 Pandemic.
During your childhood you could have lived in the painful child
labour experience. A good number of us have seen it, be it on our streets with
children hawking, the village path with little children carrying heavy Jerri
cans of water, young children working in agricultural plantations for long
hours, to the worst forms of child labour where children are engaged in various
hazardous activities like mining. Child labour in Uganda manifests in different
communities sometimes hidden underneath the pretext of preparing children for a
productive adulthood.
According to the International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Child Labour is defined as work that deprives children of their childhood,
their potential and dignity and is harmful to their physical or mental development.
As such we all need to understand, appreciate and promote the concept of light
work; work that is not harmful to the child’s health and development and
doesn’t affect school attendance and participation.
As Uganda joined the rest of the world to commemorate World
Day against Child Labour on 12th June 2020 under the theme COVID-19: Protect children from child labour, now more than ever! We all need to rally behind and
protect our children.
COVID-19
Pandemic hits at a time when Uganda has over 2,048,000 children aged 5 -17
years engaged in child labour (UBOS UNHS 2016/17).Additionally Uganda has the second youngest population in the
world with 78% being young people less than 30 years old and 49.3% being
children less than 15 years (UBOS 2019). In light of this,COVID-19 pandemic
and its immense impact on health, temporary school closures, rise in adult unemployment
and loss of livelihoods could exacerbate child labour numbers in Uganda and
steal the promise for a better future for Ugandan children.
Temporary
school closures as a result of the pandemic has affected routine learning of
over 15 million learners in Uganda. Education remains one of the most effective
ways to combat child labour but in the current situation several children could
be at risk of child labour in various sectors like agriculture where several
activities like harvesting and planting are ongoing. The risk is further
compounded by the limited access to virtual learning facilities, enabling home
learning environments across the country. Social cultural norms put young girls
at even a higher risk of participation in domestic work for long hours which may
in turn deny them opportunities and time to participate in learning activities/programs
on radios/TVs designed and provided by the Ministry of Education and sports.
The eminent
loss of jobs and livelihood for adults in some of the worst hit sectors due to
the pandemic could also likely impact negatively on household incomes. This
will directly affect the children as many households could fall into poverty
which is one of the major root causes of child labour in Uganda. As such child
labour could become a copying mechanism for several households as children are
a substituted to complement household income efforts. Young girls could be more
at risk of falling into commercial domestic work, sexual exploitation and early
marriages. Additionally the poverty in households could contribute to a high
school dropout rates putting more children at risk of Child Labour.
The question
now remains how can we rally together to protect children from child labour and
achieve our target 8.7 of the UN Sustainable Development Goals? Without doubt
the answers are reflected in the key policy responses that the Government of
Uganda has already undertaken through enforcing child labour related legal and
regulatory frameworks, community sensitization, access to Universal Primary Education
and Universal Secondary Education and most importantly offering economic
stimulants during this tough COVID-19 pandemic. Nonetheless emphasis on other
policy responses like strengthening social protection systems is now vital to
cushion households where children are at risk.
Ultimately as Ugandans we need to rally together and intensify
our efforts fight child labour and secure the promise of a better future for our
Children.
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