Children of the brick kilns

The districts of Khanewal and Vehari have been asked to provide the relevant data within an improbably short 24 hours


Editorial January 22, 2016
PHOTO: FILE

The plight of working children across Pakistan is nothing short of abysmal. Whether it is in brick kilns or football manufacture or bangle-making, children eke out miserable lives with access to few of the basics, particularly health or education. There are places in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa where education as well as dietary supplement is supplied to children in some of the brick kilns on the periphery of Peshawar, but many thousands remain outside the social safety net. In Punjab, the provincial government has now decided to intervene and we welcome the announcement that the Punjab Education Foundation (PEF) has launched a province-wide programme that will provide free education to the children of brick-kiln workers. The scheme will work across partner schools and there is now a process of data collection under way. The districts of Khanewal and Vehari have been asked to provide the relevant data within an improbably short 24 hours.

Whilst in broad terms we welcome this development — after all any education is better than no education at all — it needs to be coupled with at the very least the provision of basic health care in the brick fields and the development of dedicated Basic Health Units (BHU). They must be staffed by medical personnel familiar with the respiratory and other ailments that are specific to those working in the kilns — and this includes adults as well as children. Furthermore, there needs to be registration of every kiln and the requirement that it provide time-off for the children of its workers to be educated. Child labour in Pakistan is not going away any time soon. It is an embedded part of the economy in the majority of the country. In the past, the children who sewed footballs in Sialkot received media attention, but there are an estimated 11 million children aged four to 14 (data ‘Save the Children’) employed in factories and industry in the widest sense, the majority of whom are out of school of any sort. The initiative in Punjab addresses the tip of the iceberg, and it is now for other provinces to match and exceed it.

Published in The Express Tribune, January 23rd,  2016.

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