NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

It is work or hunger: The plight of working children

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IN the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and its associated economic challenges, children have been left even more vulnerable and further forced into child labour.

In December of 2019, COVID-19 hit the world. It was the first of its kind to have such a far-reaching global impact since HIV and Aids.

We all watched the news and marvelled as China built a stateof-the-art medical facility in a matter of days to fight this vicious and deadly phenomenon. Little did we know that it was coming for us too.

Nearly three years later, COVID-19 seems to have made itself comfortabl­e and is not going anywhere anytime soon. We must now live with it and figure out how to deal with the devastatio­n that it has left especially among the most vulnerable children.

As the world commemorat­es Internatio­nal Children’s Day on November 20, 2021, we consider the plight of working children and how COVID-19 has exacerbate­d their vulnerabil­ity.

The traditiona­l African parent will tell you that children should work so they learn how to be responsibl­e and contribute to the family through household chores. Agreed.

Child labour is defined by the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on (ILO) as work that deprives children (any person under 18) of their childhood, their potential and dignity and that is harmful to their physical and/or mental developmen­t.

This means that not all work done by children is classified as child labour, but only if it interferes with their schooling by depriving them the opportunit­y to attend school, obliging them to leave school prematurel­y or requiring them to attempt to combine school attendance with excessivel­y long and heavy work.

Whether or not a particular form of work can be called “child labour” depends on the child’s age, the type and hours of work performed, the conditions under which it is performed and the objectives pursued by individual countries.

Child labour is one of the biggest challenges in Africa, a grave child rights violation with farreachin­g negative impacts on the lives of children as it undermines their future and throws them into a cycle of poverty.

Zimbabwe is largely an informal market and this is good breeding ground for child labour practices. If you visit Mbare Musika in Harare, you will find children doing odd jobs. Before the banning of commuter omnibuses, children would act as conductors, “mahwindi” or ”chiname”.

Children manning vending stalls is not an uncommon sight. On the streets of Harare and many major towns, you will find children on their own or accompanyi­ng adult caregivers, approachin­g vehicles at the traffic lights asking for assistance.

Certain locations and border towns are known for having young boys and girls selling sex in exchange for money.

In mining towns, you will find children working in the shafts looking for treasure. In some households you will find children doing domestic work as maids and in rural areas as cattle herders.

Kudzai-Vimbiso Tseriwa

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