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2007
World Day Against Child Labour 2007: New
global partnership against child labour in agriculture
ILO press release, June 2007
The International Labour Organization (ILO) today
joined forces with five key international agricultural organizations to launch a
new landmark global partnership to tackle child labour in agriculture.
MORE...
World Day Against Child Labour 2007 to focus
on elimination of child labour in agriculture
ILO press release, June 2007
This year's World Day Against Child Labour on June 12
is to focus on the elimination of child labour in agriculture, which accounts
for a staggering percentage of the world's working children and is one of the
most dangerous forms of work for children and adults alike.
MORE...
2006
Some 35
child labourers discovered in Parika area - Shadick
Tuesday, January 3, 2006, Stabroek News
Some 35 children in the Parika area were involved in
child labour during last year. according to Minister in the Ministry of
Labour, Human Services and Social Security, Bibi Shadick.
MORE...
Dealing
with the exploitation of children
Sunday, January 22, 2006, Trinidad and Tobago Express
Questions have been raised by the Committee on the
Rights of the Child about this country's ability to effectively deal with the
exploitation of children.
MORE...
Save the children
Monday, January 23, 2006, Trinidad and Tobago Express
Opinion: As with several of the debates now taking
place about whether social development is keeping pace with this country's
financial and economic growth and expansion, an international spotlight has been
thrown on the question of the rights of the child in Trinidad and Tobago.
MORE...
ILO initiatives paying off, says Labour Minister
Monday, January 23, 2006, Trinidad and Tobago Express
Questions have been raised about Trinidad and Tobago's
ability to effectively deal with child sex abuse, child pornography and child
labour by the Committee on the Rights of the Child.
MORE...
Programme launched to combat worst forms of child labour -- US Labour Department to provide US$2M grant
Thursday, February 2, 2006, Stabroek News
A United States Department of Labour US$2 million grant
is being used to fund Educare Guyana, an initial three-and-a-half year remedial
education programme to combat the worst forms of child labour (WFCL) in Guyana.
MORE...
Groups discuss jobs hazardous to children at
Kingston workshop
Saturday, February 4, 2006, Jamaica Observer
A list of hazardous jobs that children are prohibited
from engaging in, which will ultimately be a part of the Child Care and
Protection Act, was discussed at a workshop in Kingston on Thursday.
MORE...
The working child
Saturday, February 4, 2006, Stabroek News
There is nothing furtive about child labour.
Neither the child who labours, nor the adult who sends him/her to do so attempt
to hide it, so one would not imagine that there are laws against it and
penalties involved.
MORE...
Save our children
Sunday, February 5, 2006, Trinidad and Tobago Newsday
The murder of 11-year-old Akiel Chambers in 1998
remains the blackest blot on the record of the Police Service. To be sure, there
are many other cases where police officers have been lackadaisical or
incompetent or corrupt. But the Akiel case is especially egregious for
several reasons: it was a child who was murdered; the child was being sexually
abused;
MORE...
Child month competition launched
Wednesday, February 8, 2006, Jamaica Gleaner
The National Child Month Committee has officially
launched its poster and essay competition. They are the first in a series
of activities being organised for Child Month 2006 in May to educate the public
about the needs of children. The theme for the month is "restore the
family, save our children".
MORE...
Violence against children on the rise
Saturday, February 11, 2006, Trinidad and Tobago Newsday
Violence against children and adolescents is on the
increase in the Caribbean, said Dr. Julie Meeks-Gardner, head of the Caribbean
Child Development Centre at the UWI, Mona, Jamaica.
MORE...
Child molesters running free
Sunday, February 12, 2006, Trinidad and Tobago Express
Intro: Only two weeks ago news broke of a 12-year-old
boy who had been buggered before he was thrown in a pond where he drowned. Dane
Andrews, a pupil of Hindustan Government Primary, had reportedly gone to a
man-made pond at...
MORE...
Teen sex scandal rocks Tobago
Friday, February 17, 2006, The Trinidad Guardian
Scarborough police are now investigating a shocking sex
rind in Bethel, Tobago, involving teenage girls who are being recruited as sex
slaves.
MORE...
Act now to end sex scandal in Tobago
Saturday, February 18, 2006, The Trinidad Guardian
The newspaper is demanding in the interest of the
people of Tobago that the senior police officers in charge of operations in
Tobago, the Chief Secretary of the Tobago House of Assembly, the civic and
governmental institutions on the island that seek the welfare of children,
parents and all the families of Tobago rise up immediately to ascertain the
details about the alleged sex scandal in Bethel/Bethany...
MORE...
CDA launches 'child-friendly' website
Monday, February 20, 2006, Jamaica Observer
The Child Development Agency launched its website
Friday, saying the portal opens new communication channels and offers a window
for information that should help foster sensitivity for children's rights.
MORE...
UNICEF concerned with Jamaica's child labour figure
Thursday, March 16, 2006, Jamaica Gleaner
The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) remains
concerned that a significant number of Jamaican children are involved in child
labour and living in poverty.
MORE...
Bills passed on overtime payment, child labour
Monday, May 1, 2006, Stabroek News
Four bills addressing holiday with pay, overtime
payment, child labour and licensed premises were passed on Thursday in
Parliament.
MORE...
Child labour declining worldwide for first time,
says ILO
Friday, May 5, 2006, Jamaica Observer
In the beginning I didn't know how to read. But
my teacher kept pushing me, and now reading is my life", Taina, now 15, said
from Valente, 800 miles (1,300 kilometres) northeast of Rio.
MORE...
Child labour down
Saturday, May 6, 2006, Trinidad and Tobago Newsday
The report said child labour in its worst forms is on
the decline for the first time. The report also indicates that if the
current pace of the decline is maintained, and the global momentum to stop child
labour continued, child labour could feasibly be eliminated in ten years.
MORE...
ILO says child labour on the decline
Sunday, May 7, 2006, Grenada Guardian
Taina Moraes cut sisal to make rope in northeastern
Brazil, a tough job for a seven year old girl. But UN-backed programmes
helped her family plant crops and guy goats and in doing so got Moraes out of
the factory and into the schoolhouse.
MORE...
ILO initiatives paying off, says Labour Minister
Tuesday, May 9, 2006, Barbados Advocate
As of the 12th April 2006, all 13 Caribbean member
States of the International Labour Organisation have ratified ILO Convention No.
182 on the Worst Forms of Child Labour.
MORE...
Child labour crisis in Savanna-la-Mar
Thursday, May 11, 2006, Jamaica Gleaner
Responding to reports of an alarming number of children
selling at the Savanna-la-Mar market in Westmoreland, the Office of the
Children's Advocate is spearheading a drive to stem the practice.
MORE...
Child abuse rampant in Tobago
Friday, May 26, 2006, Trinidad and Tobago Express
Sexual child abuse is rampant in Tobago, according to
District Health Visitor Vere Jack who yesterday called for a special system so
that "the child will not be raped again and again" when the tale is related.
MORE...
Parents force girls to have sex with older men for
cash
Wednesday, June 7, 2006, Jamaica Gleaner
Women's advocates are concerned that early and preteen
girls are being forced into sexual relationships with older men by their
parents.
MORE...
TT team for children protection talks
Sunday, June 11, 2006, Trinidad and Tobago Newsday
Roseau, Dominica: Nearly 40 delegates, including
ministers of government from the Eastern Caribbean, Suriname, Turks and Caicos
Islands and Trinidad and Tobago, will gather in Dominica from Wednesday for the
Governments of the Eastern Caribbean/United Nations Children Fund (INICEF)
Mid-Term Review Meeting on Child Protection issues.
MORE...
Call for child labour policy
Monday, June 12, 2006, Trinidad and Tobago Express
The All Trinidad Sugar and General Workers' Trade Union
is calling on Government to elaborate on a clear and effective policy for the
eradication and prevention of child labour in Trinidad and Tobago.
MORE...
End in sight to global problem of child labour
Monday, June 12, 2006, Deutsche Welle
Some 218 million children worldwide are forced to work.
The International Labour Organization's World Day Against Child Labor Monday is
designed to draw attention to their plight -- and the situation is already
improving.
MORE...
Students march against child labour
Tuesday, June 13, 2006, The Trinidad Guardian
Rain failed to dampen the spirits of scores of
schoolchildren who gathered at the Queen's Park Savannah yesterday to march
against child labour.
MORE...
Coming to grips with child labour
Wednesday, June 14, 2006, Trinidad and Tobago Express
The Ministry of Labour co-sponsored a march involving
young children around the Queen's Park Savannah in Port of Spain on Monday, as
part of its activities marking World Day Against Child Labour.
MORE...
New law on cards to tackle child labour
Tuesday, June 20, 2006, Jamaica Gleaner
Government is moving to draft new legislation to
eliminate child labour locally, despite progress in reducing the incidence of
abuses here.
MORE...
New law to cut out child labour
Wednesday, June 21, 2006, The Nation Newspaper
"...and even though the figure may be low for Jamaica,
the potential still exists for the whole situation to balloon so that every
effort has to be employed now to control it", he said, while addressing the
opening ceremony of national consultation on tackling child labour at the
Courtleigh Hotel in New Kingston on Monday.
MORE...
2005 Help needed for street children in T&T
Sunday, January 2, 2005, Trinidad and Tobago Express
Criminal gangs use them as servile agents, drug lords
as surreptitious couriers and perverts as their personal sex objects. All
the stakeholders, social welfare services, the non-governmental organisations
(NGOs), the police and social scientists admit these facts about street children
but the problem persists.
MORE...
Ministry says report slamming Jamaica's labour
standards overstated
Thursday, January 20, 2005, Jamaica Observer
The labour ministry says Monday's report on Jamaica,
which cited shortcomings in the application and enforcement of core labour
standards, violation of trade union rights, equality and child labour, does not
accurately reflect the status of labour standards in the country.
MORE...
Trade unionists rap sections of report on Jamaica's
labour standards
Saturday, January 22, 2005, Jamaica Observer
Two of the island's largest trade unions have
criticised aspects of the International Conference of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU)
report on Jamaica's adherence to core labour standards, and supported the
government's stance that some issues were overstated.
MORE...
Jamaica faces US sanctions -- Named among 14
countries said not doing enough to halt trafficking in persons
Saturday, June 4, 2005, Jamaica Observer
The US State Department yesterday named Jamaica among
eight new countries of 14 which could be subject to sanctions because they were
not doing enough to halt international trafficking in persons.
MORE...
US report baseless, says Jamaica
Monday, June 6, 2005, Nation News, Barbados
Brief Kingston - Jamaica's Government
yesterday denounced a United States State Department report criticising the
island's efforts to fight human trafficking, saying the findings were not
supported by hard evidence and ignored recent measures to...
MORE...
World Day against Child labour,
June 12
(Posted: June 2005)
The
World Day Against Child Labour on June 12 was established by the
ILO in
2002 to raise
the
visibility of global and local efforts against child labour and
highlight the global movement to eliminate the practice, particularly
its worst forms. According to the ILO, there are nearly 250 million
child labourers worldwide. Removing more than one million children who
work in mines and quarries from one of the worst forms of child labour
is the focus of events around the world marking the
World Day Against Child Labour on 12 June this year. Several Caribbean
countries planned activities to commemorate the World Day this year.
MORE... Child labour
exposed -- Eliminating the scourge in the Caribbean's top offenders
Monday, June 13, 2005, Trinidad and Tobago Express
"This is not the image that the Caribbean has of itself", said Leslie Bowrin,
International Labour Oranisation Regional Child Labour Project Manager.
MORE...
A rescuing ultimatum
Monday, June 13, 2005, Jamaica Observer
Owen James was right to have pointed out on
his "Business Day" programme last Wednesday that if we do not take seriously the
US State Department's 90-day ultimatum to address the problem of human
trafficking in our island, our economy could face a big blow.
MORE...Trafficking of persons and child
care protection
Tuesday, June 21, 2005, Jamaica Observer
The matter of the trafficking in persons in Jamaica has been in the news
recently, following the report by the United States of America that Jamaica has
been downgraded from the 2004 assessment of being ranked at Tire 2 in human
trafficking to now being ranked Tier 3, which is the lowest level of the
three-tier system.
MORE...The children of Jamaica's sex trade
Sunday, June 26, 2005, Jamaica Observer
She's 17 and she became a "masseuse" almost two years ago when
pregnancy forced her to drop out of one of Kingston's more prestigious girls
high schools.
MORE...Businesses exploiting children, says Peet
Sunday, June 29, 2005, The Nassau Guardian
Children are still being exploited in the business sector, a senior government
minister has claimed.
MORE...
National Seminar on Child Labour in the Bahamas
(posted: July 2005)
A National Meeting on Child Labour and Hazardous
Occupations in the Bahamas was held during the last of week of June in Nassau,
Bahamas. The meeting brought together a group of key stakeholders from business,
government, workers’ organizations and NGOs to sensitize them on child labour
issues and co-opt their assistance in the identification and demarcation of
hazardous work, consistent with the provisions of ILO Convention No. 182. and
ILO Recommendation No. 90.
ILO Convention No. 182 on the Worst Forms of Child Labour
requires each member State to host consultations to identify where hazardous
work exists. Under Article 3 of this Convention, hazardous work, one of the
worst forms of child labour, is identified as work which, by its nature or the
circumstances in which it is carried out, is likely to harm the health, safety
or morals of children. It is expected that a list of hazardous occupations for
children below 18 years of age will be drafted for the Bahamas.
The meeting was jointly hosted by the Ministry of Labour
and Immigration, Bahamas and the Regional Child Labour Project, ILO Subregional
Office for the Caribbean.
Similar meetings are being planned for the countries
covered under the ILO’s Regional Child Labour Project.
Strategic Planning Workshop
for the Bahamas National Steering Committee
(posted: July 2005)
A Strategic Planning Workshop on Child Labour was conducted
for members of the Bahamas ad hoc National Steering Committee on Child Labour on
29-30 June 2005. Hosted by the Regional Child Labour Project of the ILO
Subregional Office for the Caribbean, in collaboration with the Ministry of
Labour and Immigration, the objective of the workshop was to enhance the
members’ capacity to develop a national plan of action for the eradication and
prevention of child labour, based on a common understanding of the causes,
issues, challenges and lessons learnt on child labour.
Child labour here seen as significant -- poverty
fuelling problem, Yankana tells seminar
Wednesday, July 20 2005, Stabroek News
"Unless we deal with poverty, we would not be able to deal with the
eradication of child labour", Executive Director of the Consultative
Association of Guyanese Industry (CAGI), David Yankana, said
yesterday.
MORE... Modern day slavery
Monday, August 22, 2005,
The Trinidad Guardian
Tomorrow the world marks the UN International Day for the
Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its abolition. We remember the
thousands of slaves who suffered dehumanising treatment.
MORE...
Two Mayan communities in Belize reap benefits
from ILO’s Programme (posted: October 2005)
Two Mayan communities, The Dump/Big Falls and San Antonio,
in the Toledo District of Belize are already reaping the benefits of activities
carried out by the ILO’s pilot Action Programme on Child Labour. The Programme
is being implemented by the National Committee for Families and Children (NCFC),
with the assistance of the ILO Subregional Office for the Caribbean.
In both communities, where over 50%
of the children are estimated to be involved in child labour, between 60-70
children are now being provided with uniforms, books and opportunities to
continue their education full-time. A recent visit to the communities by Leslie
Bowrin, ILO’s Regional Child Labour Project Manager, Ms. Judith Alpuche,
Executive Director of the NCFC and Mr. Adelfino Vasquez, Labour Officer of the
Ministry of Health, Labour and Defence, Belize, provided the opportunity to
receive valuable feedback from the elders, parents and children on the
activities carried out by the Programme.
Child labour rising in T&T
Monday, October 3, 2005, Trinidad and Tobago Express
Children are being turned into
prostitutes and in one case a girl as young as eight, in Central
Trinidad, was discovered selling her body to customers for as little
as $5. They are hustling sales on street corners and in the
market place, taking up whatever jobs are offered to them and they are
being exploited.
MORE... Stem tide of child
labour
Monday, October 3, 2005,
Trinidad and Tobago's Newsday
THE EDITOR: The Convention on the Rights
of the Child states in article 32 re: child labour that...1) State
parties recognise the right of the child to be protected from economic
exploitation and from...
MORE... Child labour charge in
teen's death at TCL
Tuesday, November 8, 2005,
The Trinidad Guardian
The Trinidad Cement Ltd group's human
resource manager, Courtney Mc Nish, has promised that the Company
"will not hide anything" in the investigation of the death of 17
year-old contract worker Dinesh Rampersad.
MORE...Focus on local child
labour problems
Friday, November 11, 2005, Nation News, Barbados
After a 2002 report commissioned by the International Labour Organisation
discovered that children in Barbados are involved in prostitution and
pornography, Barbados has been dealing with it at a national level.
MORE...
2004
Ministry set to tackle child labour
Sunday, April 11, 2004, Stabroek News A
baseline survey on children doing forced labour, which will inform an action
programme, rehabilitation and child-labour policy will soon be set in motion.
MORE...
US report spurs call for action to stop
exploitation of women, girls
Wednesday, June 16, 2004, Jamaica Observer
Executive Director of the Bureau of Women's Affairs, Dr.
Glenda Simms, has called for more action to be taken to eliminate the sexual
exploitation of women and girls in the country.
MORE...
2003
6,500 street, working children in
Jamaica -- survey
Thursday, February 27, 2003, Jamaica Observer
There are more than 6,000 street and working
children in Jamaica, according to a national survey commissioned by
the Ministry of Health, and conducted by WORKER MANAGEMENT Services
Centre.
MORE...
Child development agency comes on-stream
today
Tuesday, April 1, 2003, Jamaica Observer
The Child Development Agency (CDA), an
amalgamation of the adoption board, the children's services division
and the child support unit, comes on-stream today and is expected to
tackle tough issues including child labour and the general protection
of the nation's children.
MORE...
Measures now protect children
Sunday, April 27, 2003, The Trinidad Guardian
Drastic measures must be taken to protect the
nation's children from the sadism, stupidity, or irresponsibility of
their parents and guardians. No society, and indeed no animal species,
can thrive or even survive for long without ways and means of
protecting its young.
MORE...
Government moving to combat child labour,
keep kids in school
Wednesday, June 25, 2003, Jamaica Observer
Government is soon expected to take steps to
keep children under age 15 out of the workforce and in school, by
ratifying an education regime established by the International Labour
Organisation (ILO).
MORE...
2002
Josiah returns from Labour Administration
Meeting
Friday, April 19, 2002, Antigua Sun
"We are charged with the modernisation of labour
ministries and departments, while promoting the ILO Declaration on
Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work, and the Convention on the
Worst Forms of Child Labour," Josiah said.
MORE...
Jamaica to ratify two UN Protocols on rights
of child
Thursday, May 9, 2002, Jamaica Observer
Jamaica will ratify two United Nations optional
protocols on the rights of the child and will promulgate a new Child
Care and Protection Act, Prime Minister P. J. Patterson announced
yesterday at the UN 27th Special Session on Children in New York.
MORE...
Jamaica to undertake child labour survey
Saturday, May 18, 2002, Jamaica Observer
Jamaica is to undertake a national survey on
child labour, as the international community continues to plan
strategies to combat the global problem.
MORE...
US funding Jamaica's programme to eliminate
child labour
Monday, May 27, 2002, Jamaica Observer
The government's programme to reduce and
ultimately eliminate child labour in all its forms -- the
International Programme for the Elimination of Child Labour -- is
being funded by the United States Department of Labour at a cost of
US$562,687.
MORE...
Today is World Day Against Child Labour
Wednesday, June 12, 2002, Jamaica Observer
The ILO said that despite significant progress in global
campaign to abolish child labour, it remained a major problem. "In
particular, the magnitude of child labour in its most hazardous and worst forms
is far worst than was previously thought".
MORE...
Child prostitution widespread in Jamaica
Sunday, July 21, 2002, Jamaica Observer
Children, some as young as 10 and 11 years old, are
engaged in prostitution like these ladies above and left (Observer library
photos). An International Labour Organisation (ILO) study on the worst
forms of child labour in Jamaica has unearthed a disturbing practice of
widespread prostitution by children, some as young as 10 years old, in six of
the island's 14 parishes.
MORE...
Child prostitution... Are mothers to blame?
Monday, August 12, 2002, Jamaica Observer
C is a 15 year-old involved in prostitution who reported
that she had been having sex from age eight, "because I like it".
According to her, "it was only after Watchie (school watchman) pay mi, dat mi
start collect money fi it".
MORE...
Surveys to inform child labour response
Sunday, August 18, 2002, Jamaica Observer
Jamaica is doing surveys to determine the full
dimensions of the problem as it begins to map a co-ordinated response to the
issue of child labour, including prostitution, on the island, labour ministry
officials say.
MORE...
$3.5 million to combat child labour in Ja
Saturday, September 14, 2002, Jamaica Observer
The International Programme for the Elimination of Child
Labour (IPEC) has approved funding for two action programmes aimed at
implementing activities to combat child labour.
MORE...
Labour Commissioner in Trinidad for
anti-child labour meeting
Thursday, October 24, 2002, Antigua Sun
Labour Commissioner, Austin Josiah, is taking
part in a three-day meeting in Trinidad dealing with the prevention
and elimination of the worst forms of child labour.
MORE...
Drug trafficking worst form of child labour
Wednesday, November 6, 2002, Antigua Sun
The worst forms of child labour in Antigua and
Barbuda has been identified as drug trafficking and 'sugar daddying'.
MORE...
2001
Government spending $23 million to combat child
labour Byron
Buckley, Senior Political Reporter, Thursday, October 18, 2001, The
Jamaica Observer
Over the next two years, Government plans to
spend $23 million on a programme to combat the incidence of child
labour in Jamaica, Donald Buchanan, Minister of Labour and Social
Security told Parliament Tuesday.
MORE...
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