Opinion
On Child Labour Menace In PH
Child labour is defined as the employment of persons below 18 years in an industry or business, especially when illegal or considered exploitative. The factors which push children out of their homes vary from physical maltreatment and emotional problems to being sent out of the home because of misdemeanours or family financial problems.
Naturally, it is the responsibility of parents to train, cater for and nurture their children, Also, children have the right to rely on their parents to cater for them. However, it is quite disheartening that parents,in some cases, fail to perform these obligations and do not provide basic necessities like food, shelter, clothing, medical care nor are they able to give their children basic education.
The inability of parents to provide these basic needs and the means to live a decent day to day life has forced some children into children labour. Among members of a community, a child is an individual who needs tender care because he or she possesses natural cognitive characters that are open to learning.
Low income and little education have shown to be strong predictors of low occupational or socio-economic status. No wonder, children of uneducated parents who are pushed into early labour and do not attend school, end up doing menial jobs which can hardly provide adequately for them and their families when they become adults.
In other words, work done by children often jeopardises the chance of becoming productive adults without education or training. Many parents of children involved in child labour belong to very low status in the society and are either engaged in petty trading which cannot provide the money needed to run the affairs of the home, thus, prompting the need for the children to engage in labour activities to support the family income.
As a result of the negative development effects of child labour,the Child Rights Act (2003 Section 11) identified certain inalienable rights to the dignity of a child which stipulates that “a child shall not be exposed to any form of physical, emotional or mental injury, exploitation or mistreatment, including sexual abuse nor be endangered in suffering degrading or inhuman treatment or punishment; suffer any form of attack upon his or her honour or reputation or be held in servitude or slavery while the child is under the parental care or legal guardian, including school authority, or any other person or authority having the care of the child.”
Child labour is morally and ethically unacceptable. The engagement of children in labour is harmful to them in several ways, to their family and the society at large. It impairs the physical and mental development of children and robs the society of good future leaders.
Children are the future leaders in every society, what they become tomorrow depends largely on the quality of education and social supports given to them today by their parents.
Child labour is considered as one of the many faces of the poverty of over 70 per cent of households in Port Harcourt. This is to say that the poverty level of families is basically the factor pushing many children to work full-time just to earn a living for themselves and for the day-to-day running of their families.
Despite efforts to stop child labour, there are arguments in favour of the menace in Port Harcourt. Some argue that poor families will even be poorer without the supplemental financial contribution of children. Lack of money will deprive them of the basic needs of food and shelter which will decrease their survival rate.In addition, when parents cannot afford to pay for schooling, keeping children at home and having them to help with housework or in the family business seems a reasonable option.
Children from poor homes with low or no educational background are likely to enter the street for hawking, manual labour, factory or industrial labour to generate income. The girl-child most times go into prostitution to gain shelter or food.
Improved quality in schools, investing in education to increase the value of children and the elderly would help reduce the rate of child labour in Port Harcourt.
Advocacy with the goal of strengthening national and local policies that promote education and protect children.
Government should guarantee immediate investigation into any alleged abuse and ill-treatment, identify those responsible, bring them before civil, competent and impartial tribunal and apply the penal, civil and administrative sanctions provided by law and according to international human rights.
Establish and enforce stricter time limits for actors in the justice process in order to speed up processing of cases involving children in conflict with the law.
Child labour harms a child’s social and mental development, reduces their ability to enjoy childhood, and limits educational opportunities. Without an education, children grow up without skills, they need to secure employment, making it more likely that they will send their own underaged children to work someday.
This cycle must end. Stopping child labour creates a better world for children and adults in Port Harcourt.
Ezebunwo wrote from Eastern Polytechnic, Port Harcourt.
By: Emmanuel Ezebunwo
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