Daily Dispatch

Complex supply chains keep child labour alive

Problem still prevalent across many sectors, as little is being done about it

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Child labour is an “extreme risk” in one in 10 countries globally, found an index on Thursday, urging businesses to be more vigilant about abuses in their global supply chains.

Little progress was recorded in key manufactur­ing hubs India and China, which ranked 47th and 98th out of 198 countries in 4 the Child Labour Index, with North Korea in first place with the highest risk, said research consultanc­y Verisk Maplecroft.

“The economic momentum of many countries is yet to trickle down to the poorest in society,” said Oscar Larsson, a human rights data analyst at the UK-based company.

“Child labour is still prevalent across many sectors and if countries aren’t taking action, it is up to companies to see they have the tools to ensure it’s not happening under their watch.”

There are about 150 million child labourers around the world, according to the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on (ILO), the majority working on farms in Africa and Asia.

The ILO has said the world is unlikely to meet a target of ending child labour by 2025, which is part of 17 global developmen­t goals agreed in 2015 at the United Nations.

The Child Labour Index aims to help businesses identify and root out child labour in their often complex internatio­nal supply chains, where a lack of direct oversight and many layers of subcontrac­ting can conceal workplace abuses.

The scores were calculated by assessing laws against child labour, the extent to which regulation­s are enforced, and the frequency and severity of known child labour cases.

A total of 27 countries – which account for more than 10% of the world’s population – were found to have an “extreme risk” of child labour, with Somalia, South Sudan, Eritrea and the Central African Republic completing the top five on the index.

India and China had a high level of reported incidents and had made “no tangible improvemen­t” on reducing child labour risks since 2016, when Verisk Maplecroft started collecting directly comparable data.

There was also little headway in other countries whose industries are enmeshed in global supply chains, including Ethiopia, Bangladesh, Turkey and Vietnam.

“The risks on child labour are still high and too little progress is being made on tackling it it,” Jos de Voogd, of internatio­nal children’s rights group Terre des Hommes, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

 ??  ?? CRUEL WORLD: There are about 150 million child labourers around the world, according to the ILO. Pictures: KAZI SALAHUDDIN RAZU/REHMAN ASAD/KAZI SALAHUDDIN RAZU/HIMANSHU BHATTN/URPHOTO/GETTY IMAGES
CRUEL WORLD: There are about 150 million child labourers around the world, according to the ILO. Pictures: KAZI SALAHUDDIN RAZU/REHMAN ASAD/KAZI SALAHUDDIN RAZU/HIMANSHU BHATTN/URPHOTO/GETTY IMAGES
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