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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Côte d'Ivoire's economy dependent on child labour
By our correspondent
22 October 1999
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Despite government claims that 30 percent of the budget is
spent on education, many children in the former French West African
colony Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast) are actually working.
Wielding hammers bigger than their forearms, children as young
as four toil in Dickensian conditions to recover scrap metal,
making everything from water pipes to kitchen pots for sale in
the local markets. Barefoot boys rummage through garbage tips
for rusty metal to be sharpened to a razor's edge or melted down
in home-made blacksmith's ovens.
Côte d'Ivoire has a population of around 14 million.
In a microcosm of its backward economy, 11-year-old Mohammed melts
cans in a stove, while Abdul, 15, makes moulds out of dirt, then
pours in the liquid metal to make a large cooking pot. The pots
they make sell for about $25. The money goes into a collective
fund managed by their fathers, uncles and other elders. Mohammed,
whose left arm bears two open burn wounds, said he has never been
to school. "The fire burns us, but it's part of the job.
Without this we cannot eat," he said.
Hailed as a success story, contrasting with the
instability of most of West Africa, Côte d'Ivoire is one
of the continent's fastest growing economies, up by 7 percent
over the last three years. Despite a huge debt problem that consumes
60 percent of public revenues, its economy is described by the
US State Department as "active, animated and attractive".
Officially, 30 percent of public expenditure is allocated to education,
but the budget is poorly managed and the overcrowded public schools
often turn away students.
Although primary school attendance is compulsory, in practice
the authorities do not enforce it. According to the United Nations
Children's Fund, only about 55 percent of children of primary
school age actually attend school in Côte d'Ivoire, a rate
similar to those of the war-torn Democratic Republic of Congo
and devastated Liberia.
"We don't have a real programme that fights against child
labour," said Guillaume Lago, an assistant director of family
action at Côte d'Ivoire's Ministry of Family Affairs and
the Promotion of Women. She explains that it is nearly impossible
to verify statistics such as those of the International Labour
Organisation that between 20 percent and 30 percent of children
are at work. Since many children work for their families it is
difficult to determine what qualifies as child labour, she said.
See Also:
Africa
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