Editorial
Still On Child Labour
The global community, last May 15, 2013 observed the International Day of families in keeping with the United Nations (UN) resolution 47/237, specially tailored toward, fostering and strengthening family units and making them function effectively and efficiently for societal development.
Primary among the issues that often agitate the minds of stakeholders and organizations has been, how to attract global attention towards supporting the family, as the nucleus of societal development and growth for the well-being of the larger society.
Similarly, on June 12, 2013 the world celebrated the World Child Labour Day also to drum support for children facing increasing pathetic conditions in different environments. Of greater importance, are children who are daily being subjected to very dehumanizing treatments and ending up as victims of child labour, school drop-outs, child soldiers, child trafficking, among other anti-social conditions that militate against the overall development and well-being of the child.
It is, perhaps, against this backdrop that the UN passed a resolution to protect the child against abuses of such natural rights. The Child Rights Act, as it is known and has been domesticated by several counties and states, is clear as such child rights.
This year’s Child Labour Day’s theme: No Child Labour In Domestic Work,’ therefore, becomes more apt and appropriate as rising cases of child labour are on the increase, thus denying the child opportunities to excel in different human endeavours.
In Africa, Nigeria appears to be the worst culprit in this direction, as statistics indicate that the nation still ranks among the highest in number of out-of-school children in the continent, despite increases in school enrolment and the country’s abundant human and natural resources.
Paradoxically and sadly too, Nigeria with its vast oil and gas potential, with the billions of petro dollar in her kitty still battles with such phenomenon. It is, indeed, regrettable that the country at this critical period is associated with the lamentable scenario.
While successive dispensations had strived hard to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), one of which is achieving the universal Primary Education (UPE) for all by 2015, the country is still perennially associated with the paradox of child labour and abuse.
The Tide observes that the problem of child labour has virtually become endemic and widespred in Nigeria in spite of the volume of funds expended in the education sector and enlightenment on the issue.
We frown at the fact that Nigeria’s successive administrations in the three tiers of government had not been able to reverse the ugly trend, thus, projecting the country in bad light within the global community.
The Tide therefore, urges our education policy makers and executors to go back to the drawing board to identify the causative factors with a view to addressing them headlong.
We recommend that steps should be taken to re-invent the traditional extended family system; address the protracted socio-economic challenges and cultivate a warped cultural and value system which discourages child labour in all ramifications.
Moreso, family units should be encouraged to plan for their children by ensuring their children’s access to schools while we expect that governments would also go a step further to enforce the Universal basic Education (UBE) law and the Child Rights Law in order to make the difference in protecting the child from unwholesome upbringing.
This, The Tide thinks, is a challenge all Nigerians must confront if the country’s ranking, with the highest figure of school drop-outs in Africa is to be reversed.
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