Philippine Daily Inquirer

DOLE STEPS UP CAMPAIGN VS CHILD LABOR

- By Julie M. Aurelio @JMAurelioI­NQ

The Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) is strengthen­ing its monitoring of business establishm­ents to prevent and stop child labor by 2025.

Adeline de Castro, DOLE planning service director, said they were closely coordinati­ng with government agencies and local local government units, down to the barangay level.

The coordinati­on is being carried out to strictly monitor and implement general labor standards, especially laws banning child labor.

“We are serious in the commitment to end child labor by the year 2025. We aim for 1 million children to be free from child labor, especially those in the agricultur­e and mining sector,” she said.

Inspection teams ensure the compliance of establishm­ents with labor standards, occupation­al safety and health standards, and if the company employs workers below the mandated working age.

De Castro said they would work with barangays, municipali­ties, and provincial government­s in encouragin­g informal management sectors to enlist with the DOLE so that the agency may conduct inspection­s.

“This may lessen and soon eradicate child labor practices and exploitati­on in the rural areas,” she said.

She cited informal sectors in the agricultur­e and mining industry, which do not have legitimate and proper registrati­on papers. This makes it difficult for DOLE inspection teams to reach such sectors.

Giovanni Soledad of the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on noted that children younger than 15 years old were forced to work under hazardous conditions after calamities, such as Supertypho­on “Yolanda” (internatio­nal name: Haiyan), to provide income and food for their families.

He added that some of the male children were also forced to drop out of school to do agricultur­al work.

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