
Invisible workers
A recent survey conducted by the Sindh Labour Department, assisted by UNICEF and the Bureau of Statistics Sindh, revealed that over 1.6 million children aged 10 to 17 are involved in some form of labour, of which 50.4 per cent are exposed to hazardous and exploitative conditions. Excessive working hours with inadequate food and water are deplorably a norm, but many children are even forced to handle unsafe tools and machinery.
While child labour has significantly decreased as compared to 1996, the numbers that stand today are no cause for celebration. There are approximately 4.1 million out-of-school children in Sindh and child labour practices dramatically exacerbate this crisis, specially for girls aged 14 to 17 who have to manage a 'second shift' with household chores.
The complexity of the child labour crisis demands compound solutions. Families living in poverty often resort to sending their kids into employment or bonded labour believing they have no other viable option. This crisis is the culmination of low literacy, poor family planning, inflation and opportunistic business practices. Therefore, merely outlawing child labour will never be enough. The rulers must protect children by providing free education and ensuring that their families are not left to suffer as a result.
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Express Tribune
2 days ago
- Express Tribune
Invisible workers
According to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, children have the right to education and the right to play - for the simple fact that they are children. Nothing else is meant to be expected of them. It is during the crucial beginning years that children learn about the world, understand their role in it and exercise their curiosity to develop skills that will help them later in life. But due to lax regulations, poverty and low literacy rates, the children of Sindh remain deprived of the basic tenets of childhood. A recent survey conducted by the Sindh Labour Department, assisted by UNICEF and the Bureau of Statistics Sindh, revealed that over 1.6 million children aged 10 to 17 are involved in some form of labour, of which 50.4 per cent are exposed to hazardous and exploitative conditions. Excessive working hours with inadequate food and water are deplorably a norm, but many children are even forced to handle unsafe tools and machinery. While child labour has significantly decreased as compared to 1996, the numbers that stand today are no cause for celebration. There are approximately 4.1 million out-of-school children in Sindh and child labour practices dramatically exacerbate this crisis, specially for girls aged 14 to 17 who have to manage a 'second shift' with household chores. The complexity of the child labour crisis demands compound solutions. Families living in poverty often resort to sending their kids into employment or bonded labour believing they have no other viable option. This crisis is the culmination of low literacy, poor family planning, inflation and opportunistic business practices. Therefore, merely outlawing child labour will never be enough. The rulers must protect children by providing free education and ensuring that their families are not left to suffer as a result.


Express Tribune
3 days ago
- Express Tribune
Pakistan Sends 28th Aid Shipment to Gaza as Humanitarian Crisis Deepens
Listen to article Alkhidmat Foundation Pakistan on Monday dispatched its 28th humanitarian consignment to Gaza, carrying 100 tons of essential food and medical supplies, in a continued show of solidarity with the Palestinian people. The aid is part of the foundation's ongoing relief efforts for the war-affected population in the besieged enclave. Alhamdulillah! Alkhidmat has sent a new consignment of 100 tons of relief goods from Islamabad for Palestinian families in Gaza facing a severe food crisis.#Alkhidmat #gaza #palsetine #Support #Palestine — Alkhidmat Foundation Pakistan (@AlkhidmatOrg) August 4, 2025 The consignment, arranged in coordination with the Government of Pakistan and the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), was flown from Islamabad via a special aircraft to Amman, Jordan, from where it will be transported to Gaza for distribution among displaced families. The aid dispatch comes at a time when humanitarian conditions in Gaza continue to deteriorate. According to the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNRWA, child malnutrition rates have tripled in the last three months, and the region faces a risk of famine if access is not urgently expanded. On July 10, children and women were killed and injured while waiting for nutrition supplies in Gaza. The killing of families trying to access life-saving aid is unconscionable. UNICEF's @TedChaiban shares what's needed urgently for children in Gaza. — UNICEF (@UNICEF) August 2, 2025 Aid organisations say at least 600 aid trucks are needed per day to meet the Strip's basic humanitarian needs. Nearly 1,600 aid trucks have entered Gaza since Israel eased restrictions in late July Local Palestinian health authorities reported that at least 80 people were killed on Sunday by Israeli airstrikes and gunfire across the Gaza Strip. According to Palestinian medics, several of the victims were attempting to reach aid distribution points in the central and southern regions of the enclave. Among the dead was a staff member of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society. The organization stated that an Israeli strike hit its headquarters in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, sparking a fire on the building's first floor. Growing hunger At least 41 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli attacks across Gaza since dawn, including 20 people who were seeking aid, hospital sources told Al Jazeera. The killings come as the United Nations warns that Gaza is on the brink of famine, with one in three residents reportedly going days without food. 'Over 320,000 young children are now at risk of acute malnutrition,' said Ted Chaiban, UNICEF's Deputy Executive Director for Humanitarian Action and Supply Operations, in a statement on Friday following his recent visit to Israel, Gaza, and the occupied West Bank. Hospitals in Gaza have recorded six new deaths from famine and malnutrition in the past 24 hours, including one child, according to the Gaza Health brings the total number of people who have died from hunger-related causes since the start of the war to 181, including 94 children. As starvation continues to spread across the Gaza Strip, harrowing images of emaciated children and rising reports of hunger-related deaths have sparked global outrage, pressuring Israel to allow increased humanitarian aid into the territory earlier this week. Ceasefire The Palestinian Foreign Ministry has urged the UN Security Council (UNSC) to 'fulfill its responsibilities' by imposing an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and carrying out an official visit to the region to witness the situation firsthand. In a statement shared on social media, the Palestinian Foreign Ministry called on the UN Security Council to 'stop the crimes of genocide, displacement, and annexation against our people' and to act on the resolutions of a recent UN conference advocating for a two-state solution. The ministry warned that over two million Palestinians in Gaza are trapped in a 'tight death circle' — facing relentless violence, starvation, thirst, lack of medical care, and the denial of all fundamental human rights. Israel's war on Gaza The Israeli army has launched a brutal offensive against Gaza since October 2023, killing at least 58,667 Palestinians, including 17,400 children. More than 139,974 people have been injured, and over 14,222 are missing and presumed dead. Last November, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza. Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its war on the enclave.


Express Tribune
4 days ago
- Express Tribune
Child labour data reveals alarming trends
A survey, conducted after 28 years, has revealed alarming data that over 1.6 million children aged 10 to 17 are engaged in different forms of labour, many in dangerous and exploitative environments, across Sindh. The Sindh Child Labour Survey 2022-2024, conducted by the Sindh Labour Department with technical assistance from Unicef and the Bureau of Statistics Sindh, revealed that 50.4 per cent of working children between ages 10 and 17 are exposed to hazardous conditions including excessive working hours, extreme weather, and unsafe tools and machinery. Director General Labour, Muhammad Ali Shah, who led the project, said that the report has been submitted to the provincial government for action. He mentioned a significant decline in child labour compared to the 1996 national baseline — nearly 50 per cent lower — but emphasised that the numbers are still deeply concerning. According to the findings, school attendance among working children is just 40.6 per cent, in contrast to 70.5 per cent among non-working children. Educational participation drops significantly with age, particularly among girls aged 14 to 17, who also shoulder the bulk of household chores — averaging 13.9 hours of unpaid domestic work per week. This contributes heavily to school dropout rates. District-level data shows wide disparities. Qambar Shahdadkot tops the list with a child labour prevalence of 30.8 per cent, followed by Tharparkar at 29 per cent, Tando Muhammad Khan at 20.3 per cent, and Shikarpur at 20.2 per cent. Karachi has the lowest rate, at just 2.38 per cent. The report also draws a strong correlation between poverty and child labour. In the poorest households, 33.7 per cent reported having at least one child engaged in work.