4% or 146,000 Workers in Brazil’s Mines Are Children

The World Day Against Child Labor, instituted in 2002 upon an initiative of the International Labor Organization (ILO), was commemorated yesterday, June 12, in Brazil.

This year’s theme was the exploitation of children and adolescents who work in mining, considered one of the worst forms of child labor.


According to the IBGE’s (Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics) 2003 National Household Sample Survey, 145,967 Brazilian children and adolescents between the ages of 5 and 17 were occupied in this area, corresponding to 4% of the workforce in the sector.


Although Brazilian laws prohibit children under 14 from working and, when they are 14-15, only allows them to work as apprentices, exploitation of child labor is still a reality in the country.


Throughout Brazil there are approximately 2.7 million working boys and girls, according to the 2003 National Household Sample Survey (PNAD).


The survey also shows that the number of working children and adolescents decreased 47.5%, from 5.1 million to 2.7 million, between 1995 and 2003.


For the executive secretary of the Ministry of Social Development and Hunger Alleviation, Márcia Lopes, Brazil has cause to commemorate the date.


She underscores the importance of initiatives that have made it possible to reduce the exploitation of child labor and mentions the creation of the Program for the Eradication of Child Labor (Peti) as the main advance.


Launched in 1996, the program currently cares for 930,824 children and adolescents between the ages of 7 and 15.


The secretary says that the number of Peti beneficiaries will reach one million in the coming months. According to Lopes, 2.4 million children have been withdrawn from child labor since the program began.


The Ministry released a study recently on Peti beneficiaries, showing that, in a universe of 568,608 beneficiaries, 43.59% came from agriculture and 12.06%, from street vending.


According to Lopes, the federal government expects to eradicate child labor by the end of 2006.


“Brazil is recognized around the globe, because it is the only country in which the State assumed the responsibility for coordinating actions to eradicate child labor,” she points out.


Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil and South America’s Soybean Reserves Reach Low Levels

According to Oil World latest forecast, Brazil and South America's soy bean reserves suffered ...

Lower Brazil Risk Means the Best Conditions Ever for Export Money

Brazil has never had so many resources available in its financial system for financing ...

Brazil’s Horse of the Year Bought by Emir of Dubai

It is not uncommon for Brazilian horses to compete and be sold abroad. In ...

A Planetary Workers’ Union Is Being Born in Brazil

A unified workers central union is expected to emerge from the fusion of the two ...

Having Learned from US Mistakes China Goes Soft to Win Brazil and LatAm’s Hearts

On November 5, 2008, the Chinese government released a policy paper on Latin America ...

Relations with Arabs Will Never Be the Same Again, Says Brazil’s Lula

The Presidents of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva; Peru, Alejandro Toledo; Algeria, Abdelaziz ...

43.7% of Brazilian Jobs Go to Women, a Slight Growth

Women’s participation in the Brazilian labor market increased in the country’s six major metropolitan ...

US Indicts Brazilian Indy-500 Champ Castroneves on Tax Evasion

Brazilian car racer Hélio Castroneves, 33. a resident of Coral Gables, in Florida, and ...

Part II: Richard Boukas talks about life, music, and the lure of the Brazilian.

Surveying the panorama, I saw mile after mile of developed beaches fronted by high-rise ...

New Millennium in the Backlands

Finished the trance, the old man stood up and took the grandson in his ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`