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Gov’t denies child labour claims

Published:Thursday | December 10, 2020 | 12:09 AM

BRIDGETOWN (CMC):

The Barbados government has said there’s no child labour on the island even as a Multiple Indicator Cluster 2012 Survey conducted by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) points to 2.3 per cent incident rate on the island.

In a statement, Labour and Social Partnership Relations Minister Colin Jordan explained that what the data showed was that a significant number of children were involved in household chores.

“Let me make it absolutely clear that we have no concerns regarding children under the age of 16 who are permitted to age-appropriate work on weekends and during vacation time that does not affect their education and development,” Jordan told delegates to a three-day National Child Labour Seminar hosted by the International Labour Organization (ILO) via the Zoom platform. The conference ends on Friday.

Jordan said that it was traditional in Barbados for children to assist with household chores, and family-owned businesses, such as a shop or a bakery.

Noting that he himself was a product of such an upbringing, Jordan said such involvement served to allow children to gain discipline; hone interpersonal skills; and build self-esteem as they developed their character.

However, he made it clear that such actions did not account for children working after school and being too tired to function in the classroom, or missing classes because of work.

The minister credited the strides made in protecting children from child labour to the work of the Ministry of Education and its enforcement of the Education Act.

He also gave the assurance that government remained committed to addressing all issues of child labour as it was signatory to the Convention on the Rights of the Child from 1990.

“Let me stress that child labour is not only wrong on moral grounds but it is a threat to the notion of decent work, and challenges efforts to promote sustainable economic growth,” he said.