The Global March joins in celebrating the first World Day
Against Child Labour and commends the pioneering efforts the
ILO has made in the worldwide drive to eliminate child labour.
The problem is clearly one of the most serious issues facing
humanity today. With an estimated 246 million children engaged
in child labour and almost 73% involved in its worst forms,
something must be done now!
It is encouraging that since the unanimous adoption of Convention
182, most countries have ratified the instrument, declared
their support for the cause, and undertaken several steps
to address the problem. Unfortunately, this has not been enough.
The very first article of Convention 182 calls on member states
to "take immediate and effective measures to secure the
prohibition and elimination of the worst forms of child labour
as a matter of urgency." In most countries, however,
the efforts have not met this standard.
When we see children suffering through a life of slavery,
prostitution, abuse, and despair, there can be no grounds
for delay! We must change their lives now, with the same sense
of urgency and determination we would show if our own children
were in danger.
Most of the children who were suffering in the worst forms
of child labour when ILO Convention 182 was adopted 3 years
ago have not enjoyed any relief or rehabilitation since then.
The world community has not even managed to stop the fresh
recruitment of child labourers. When most of the children
in the worst forms of child labour today began their life
of exploitation since the adoption of Convention 182, we must
recognise that our efforts have not been enough and we must
do much, much more to end child labour.
The Global March Against Child Labour calls upon the international
community to make the greatest effort possible to end this
widespread violation of human rights and children's dignity.
We call for the ILO and its members to:
- Recommit to ending child labour as one of organisation's
and the world's top priorities
- Establish clear timetables for the elimination of child
labour and its worst forms
- Closely and objectively monitor progress towards the elimination
of child labour as a fundamental part of protecting the
rights of all children
- Devote the maximum possible resources of the ILO to the
cause of ending child labour and integrate the issue of
child labour in all relevant spheres of the ILO's activities
- Advance the role of IPEC from the direct implementation
of child labour projects to catalysing, supporting, and
guiding nationally owned and managed programs for the time-bound
elimination of child labour
- Mobilise the full involvement of all UN agencies, regional
organisations, international donors, national governments,
social partners, and civil society organisations for the
cause of ending child labour
- Make the effective elimination of child labour a top priority
for all governments
- Make the effective elimination of child labour one of
the core responsibilities of all employers' associations
and trade unions
- Involve child labourers themselves in the process of ending
their exploitation
- Generate the highest level of political support for the
cause through the establishment of an International Task
Force on Child Labour composed of heads of UN agencies,
heads of state, and leaders from employers, workers, and
civil society, to coordinate and accelerate international
efforts to end child labour
- Celebrate the World Day Against Child Labour each year
with activities and initiatives to spread greater awareness
and strengthen public resolve to address the problem
- Promote ILO Convention 138 as an indispensable tool for
ensuring that girls and boys of all countries have a chance
for quality education before entering the world of work
- Ensure that bringing children from the exploitation of
child labour into the enlightenment of education is placed
to the heart of international development efforts and make
working children a priority target group of educational
programs
- Recognise and fulfil the special duty the ILO has to protect
the lives and improve the future of a quarter of a billion
humans working now as child labourers
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