3 million child labourers toil in the Philippines | Philippine Daily Inquirer / Asia News Network
Philip C. Tubeza, Philippine Daily Inquirer, June 27, 2012
There are 3 million child labourers
toiling in the Philippines and almost all of them are working in
hazardous conditions, according to a survey financed by the
International Labor Organization (ILO).
The 2011 Survey on Children conducted by
the National Statistics Office (NSO) and released on Tuesday showed that
out of the 29.019 million Filipino children aged 5-17 years old, about
18.9 per cent or 5.59 million, were already working.
This is higher than the 4 million
Filipino working children registered in a 2001 survey conducted by the
ILO and the US Department of Labor.
Of the 5.59 million children at work,
3.028 million were considered as child laborers and 2.993 million were
reported to be exposed to hazardous child labour.
“We’re surprised by this … We at the
[labour department] reiterate our pledge to do our utmost in making
every barangay in the country with high child labour incidence child
labour-free,” Labour Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz said at the launching in
Pasig City of a new campaign to stamp out child labor in the country.
“In carrying out this resolve, we will take it one barangay at a time. We will meet the challenge head-on,” she added.
Baldoz said the government had identified
609 of the country’s poorest municipalities and was targeting 80
barangay (or villages) that had the highest incidence of child labour.
She also pointed out that the survey showed that 69.5 per cent of child laborers, or 2.106 million, were attending school.
Under the law, child labour is defined as
any work or economic activity performed by a child that subjects him or
her to any form of exploitation, or is harmful to his or her health and
safety, or physical, mental, or psycho-social development.
Hazardous child labor refers to
employment in industries and occupations designated as hazardous under
the country’s occupational safety and health standards.
“We have to get to the root of child
labour, which is linked with poverty and lack of decent and productive
work,” said ILO country director Lawrence Jeff Johnson.
“While we strive to keep children in
school and away from child labour, we need to ensure decent and
productive work for parents and basic social protection for families,”
Johnson added.
Carmelita Ericta, NSO administrator, said 60 per cent of child labourers in the country were in the agricultural sector.
“There are two boys for every girl,
especially in agriculture. In the services sector, there are more girls
than boys. Sixty per cent are in agriculture unlike in our Labour Force
Survey, which shows that only 30 per cent [of the country’s labour
force] is in agriculture,” Ericta said.
“As they grow older, they also tend to
drop out of school. With the younger age group, aged 5 to 9 years old,
90 per cent are in school. By the time they reach 15, only half of them
are in school,” she said.
“They are working mostly in the farms but
some of them work in construction sites. Around 3 per cent are actually
in the mines, quarries, or factory sites,” she added.
The regions, which had the highest
incidence of child labour, were Central Luzon, Bicol, Western Visayas,
Northern Mindanao, and Central Visayas, the survey showed.
Ericta said the 2.993 million child
labourers exposed to hazardous conditions could include those involved
in the worst forms of child labor—sex trade, drug trafficking, other
illicit activities, and armed conflict.
“They could be included but they’re not
labelled as such. This is because when you ask them where they work,
they could say they’re waitresses when they’re actually prostituted
children,” Ericta said.
“These [2.993 million] are the ones
exposed to chemicals, biological hazards like bacteria that cause
diseases or physical hazards,” she added.
The Philippines has pledged to reduce by
75 per cent all worst forms of child labour by 2015, which is anchored
on the millennium development goal of achieving universal education.
Ericta also said that the 2001 and 2011
surveys could not be compared because a different methodology was used
in the 2001 survey, which involved “more general questions”.
Ericta said the survey was conducted in October 2011 involving 50,000 families across the country.
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