Millions pushed into child labour in Pakistan

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Tears tracing lines of dirt on his face, six-year-old Nabeel Mukhtar cries while crouching on a pavement to scrub motorbikes, his job for nine hours a day, six days a week. He is one of millions of children driven into labour by poverty in a country where the unpopular government is seen as too corrupt and ineffective to care for its citizens, even the young and helpless. “I want to study and become a doctor but we don’t have any money,” said Mukhtar, who helps his family make ends meet. Rising food and fuel prices and a struggling economy have forced many families to send their children to search for work instead of going to the classroom.
Frequent political crises in Pakistan mean the nation’s leaders are unlikely to end child labour, or a host of other problems from a Taliban insurgency to power cuts, any time soon. “From the bottom of my heart, I want to send my son to school but we have so many expenses … We struggle to put food on our table,” said Mukhtar’s mother, Shazia, who also has a four-year-old son and a two-year-old daughter. Her husband, Mohammed, a street barber, earns only Rs 7,500 ($83) a month, not enough to support the family.
“He’s learning to work and he also earns around 300-400 rupees. So what’s wrong in that? We are poor,” Mohammed said of the boy.
Pakistan needs to take immediate measures to stabilise growing budget pressures and to raise interest rates to contain rising inflation, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned on Monday.
Economic pressures are forcing young Pakistanis, like teenager Noor Shah and his three brothers, to leave home in search of work. They now live in a tiny room above a grimy tea shop where they toil all day in Pakistan’s biggest city and commercial hub of Karachi. “I have so many dishes to wash. When I get tired the men serving tea become very angry with me. They swear and shout,” said Shah, who is from Balochistan.
Others, like 11-year-old labourer Kashif, are subjected to harsher treatment. “If he makes a mistake I’ll hit him,” said his 19-year-old supervisor, Tanveer Shehzad, who said he had endured the same hardship as a child labourer.
Do more: Up to 10 million children are estimated to be working in Pakistan, says Mannan Rana, child and adolescent protection specialist at the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
The latest government figures, showing three million child labourers, date back to 1996, underscoring how scant attention has been paid to documenting the problem, which is likely to get worse given the makeup of the fast-growing population.
The plight of child labourers in Pakistan came under international scrutiny when it was discovered that children were hand-stitching soccer balls in the town of Sialkot. Foreign sports equipment companies are wary of any hint of association with child exploitation. One stopped orders in 2006 from a Pakistan-based supplier of hand-stitched soccer balls, saying the factory had failed to correct labour compliance violations.
But the outcry has not helped much. “The problem is that the whole industry has moved into private homes, which has made it a bit difficult to monitor if child labour is being used,” said Hussain Naqi, the national coordinator of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan. “This is not just an issue in Sialkot, child labour is occurring all across Pakistan in very dangerous sectors like glass bangle manufacturing, cleaning of oil tankers, poultry farms, motor workshops, brick kilns and small hotels.”
On Monday, the collapse of a three-storey factory in Lahore after a gas explosion highlighted dangers faced by child labourers. “I was inside the building when the blast happened. Two other boys were with me and they started running,” said eight-year-old Asad, a labourer in the veterinary product facility. “I don’t know where they went or if they are alive.” His sobbing mother said crushing poverty had left her no choice but to send her son to work in such conditions.
“The problem is there and we are not in a state of denial,” said Shahnaz Wazir Ali, social sector special assistant to the prime minister, adding that about 45 percent of Pakistan’s population of almost 180 million is below the age of 22.
“It is all very damaging for a child’s psychology,” said Salma Jafar, executive director at Social Innovations, a human rights advocacy group. “Once you are abused, you grow up with that abuse.”
Twelve-year-old Mohammed Naeem, the eldest of three orphans, ran away from his first boss. He could not take the verbal and physical abuse. But his new work, scraping rust all day for Rs 25 at a mechanic’s shop to feed his sisters, is still gruelling. “I don’t see any other life for myself. What can I do. I’m helpless. The government is doing nothing for us,” said the boy, wearing soiled clothing and open, oversized sandals. “All I ask of them is to assist me in my helpless state. To take it away.”