World | Afghanistan
Afghan child labour may rise as foreign aid dries up
Pullout of troops by 2014 will shift attention away from the country
Kabul: Dwindling development aid as the war winds down in Afghanistan means child labour in the country is at risk of becoming more widespread, the International Labour Organisation (ILO) warned yesterday.
Half of Afghanistan's population of 30 million are under 15, with almost two million children in full or part-time work, Unicef estimates.
With foreign troops fighting Taliban insurgents pulling out by the end of 2014, global attention is shifting away from Afghanistan and its humanitarian needs, the ILO's representative to Kabul, Herve Berger, said.
"The issue of child labour may fall below the radar screen and be seen as less important after 2014," Berger said.
Berger cited a report by the UN agency detailing one of the worst forms of child labour — brickmaking in the kilns in the country's east. Though both child labour and so-called bonded work are illegal in Afghanistan, children as young as five churn out hundreds of bricks a week for a few dollars to pay off family debts.
Poor health from harsh working conditions, reliance on shelter and electricity provided by brick employers and denied education mean brickmakers are tied to their work.
"All service sectors will be affected as aid dries up," Sarah Cramer, project manager at Samuel Hall Consulting, which conducted the study for the ILO, said.
Afghanistan
French president in Afghanistan talks of pullout
Two foreign doctors abducted
US ambassador to Kabul to quit, embassy says
Afghan troops complain about obsolete gear
Top Afghan peace negotiator killed
Procurement switch puts boot into Afghan dream
US struck secret deal with Taliban
Soldiers take dogs back home to bust stress
More from World
News Editor's choice
-
Ukraine leaders fight over Russian language
Violence erupts in Ukraine parliament over a bill to allow use of Russian language in courts, hospitals
-
CBSE: 100% success in many UAE schools
6,000 students from 53 schools meet grade expectations in examinations
-
'I can’t believe he is not going to come back'
Seventeen-year-old boy went missing in Dubai during a visit from Pakistan

