Tuesday 24 June 2014

4.3million Ugandan children forced into Child labour (slavery), as poverty increases

By Guest Writer Naigaga Phiona Fortunate

At least two million children aged from five to 17 years are engaged in child labour, the first Child Labour Report released by the Uganda Bureau of Statistic (UBOS) revealed.

The report unveiled last year in September established that the two million child labourers accounted for 16% of the entire population of 11.5 million children in Uganda.

According to the report, child labour is among the major causes of child abuse and exploitation and fundamental violation of children rights.

The report further faults Child Labour for slowing down broader national poverty reduction and development efforts on top of being an obstacle to achieving universal education.
Boy sells maize during school time. Photo/Esther Namirimu
“Children who are forced out of school into child labour to help supplement income of their families are denied the opportunity to acquire necessary knowledge and skills to aid them get decent employment in future leading to the poverty cycle,” read the report.

It indicated that about 4.3 million children in absolute terms were in work in 2011/2012

Child labour was defined in the study as work that is mentally, physically, socially and morally harmful to children. It further includes work activities that interfere with children’s school attendance.

According to the United States Department of Labor 2012 findings on the worst forms of Child Labor, Uganda made a minimal advancement in efforts to eliminate the worst forms of child labor. 

Boy sells maize during school time. Photo/Esther Namirimu
The Government approved and launched the National Action Plan for the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labor (2012/2013-2016/2017) (NAP) and created a Counter Trafficking in Persons (CTIP) Office and an inter-ministerial Task Force to coordinate anti-trafficking efforts. 

However, gaps remain in legislation and enforcement efforts. The legal framework lacks protection for boys from prostitution. In addition, there is a gap between the age to which education is compulsory and the minimum age for work. 

Labor inspections are not carried out in rural areas. Children continue to engage in the worst forms of child labor, primarily in hazardous forms of agriculture and in domestic service.





Prevalence and sectoral distribution of the worst forms of Child Labor

According to the United States Department of Labor 2012 findings on the worst forms of Child Labor, Children in Uganda are engaged in the worst forms of child labor, primarily in hazardous forms of agriculture and in domestic service. It is estimated that the majority of children who work in Uganda are found working in agriculture to produce tobacco, coffee, tea, rice and sugarcane, and vanilla.  

Children who work on tobacco farms in Uganda are exposed to health hazards and risk developmental defects and respiratory diseases due to long working hours and exposure to tobacco fumes.
Children working in agriculture may use dangerous tools, carry heavy loads, and be exposed to harmful pesticides. 

Boy sells maize during school time. Photo/Esther Namirimu
Many children in Uganda are also engaged in the worst forms of child labor as domestic servants. Child domestic servants in Uganda commonly lack clear terms of service, work long hours with little or no pay, lack opportunities for education, are given insufficient food, and risk sexual exploitation and physical abuse from their employers.

Children in Uganda work in fishing; these children receive little or no pay, work long hours processing and smoking fish, and risk injuries from burns and fatigue.

In the Karamoja region of Uganda, children herd cattle and may fall victim to involvement in cattle rustling. These children risk attacks by armed men, isolation, exposure to extreme weather conditions, and denial of access to schooling. Children in Uganda work in hazardous activities related to the production of bricks. Children in Uganda also burn and carry charcoal. Although evidence is limited, there are reports that children work in hazardous activities in the production of stone.

Children in Uganda engage in cross-border trading. Many children who live at border crossing towns and villages drop out of school to carry heavy loads such as merchandise on their heads to and from Ugandan border points.

Children work as street vendors selling small items, some of these children end up being forced to beg on the streets.

Children risk involvement in the worst forms of child labor, including commercial sexual exploitation and forced labor, while working in bars and restaurants. Some children as young as age 10 are victims of commercial sexual exploitation. Children in the custody of pimps and brothel owners are used to produce pornographic materials. These children are also exposed to sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV/AIDS.

Uganda is a source and destination country for the trafficking of children. Children are trafficked internally for sexual exploitation and forced labor in fishing, agriculture, and domestic service.

In some cases, Ugandan children have been trafficked to Central, East, and North Africa for commercial sexual exploitation and forced labor. Children from Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, Rwanda, and Tanzania are also trafficked to Uganda for commercial sexual exploitation and agricultural work.
As of 2011, there had been no reports that the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) had abducted and conscripted children within Uganda for six years; however, about 5,000 Ugandan children previously abducted by the LRA were still missing.

Fight against child labour in Uganda 

The International Labour Organization and the Government of Uganda through the Ministry of Education and sports have joined efforts to start fighting Child Labour through improving education.
Cathy Mugerwa, Principal Education Officer and program coordinator of this project said that they are supporting the development of implementation framework of the Non-formal Education policy for educationally disadvantaged children.

Boy sells maize during school time. 
The government of Uganda has made important steps towards addressing the issue of child labour and promotion of education such as the ratifications of the two ILO Conventions No 138 of the Worst forms of Child Labour.

The Universal primary education (UPE) programme (1997) and the Education act (2008). In November 2006, the National Child Labour Policy was enacted and a five year National Action Plan (NAP) for elimination of child labour in Uganda was adopted and officially launched in June2012.
Still and despite all good intentions and estimated 1.76million, 5-7 year olds in Uganda are engaged in child labour (UCW 2008).

The highest concentrations of working children are found in Western Uganda (55.7%); followed by Eastern and Southern Uganda with 53% and 52.1% respectively, with 45.4% in the Northern region and 25.3% in Kampala.

Mugerwa added that in all regions, more males than females are engaged in child labour although the variations are rather slight. 

Child labour in Uganda manifests itself in various forms and in different sectors including the commercial and subsistence agriculture, domestic service, construction, fishing, stone and sand quarries, service industries such as hotels and bars. Commercial sexual exploitation, trafficking, unpaid servitude/bondage and other forms of exploitation are persisting.

National Programme Officer of the international Labour Organization, Acayo Jackie Banya, said that employment of children undermines an enterprise’s productivity and competitiveness. The prevention of child labour is one of the basic principles of the ILO.

“To reduce and finally end child labour, we need great efforts by all members of the society; we must all work hand in hand to promotes conditions that favour child rights,” she added.

Banya also notes that employing children undermines their potential of becoming intellectual human capital which is urgently required for improving the productivity and competitiveness of enterprises and our country.

“We do not stop children from working if they have attained the minimum age of 14 years and this has to be domesticated work; work which is not dangerous to the child’s health. Imagine a child carrying a heavy machine that dehumanizes the child,” she added.

Banya noted that we would not be having children working if they were also forced to be in school and take advantage of the Universal Primary Education.

Laws and Regulations on the Worst Forms of Child Labor

The Employment Act sets the minimum age for work in Uganda at 14. The Act permits children ages 12 to 14 to perform light work under adult supervision if it does not interfere with the child’s education. In addition, no child younger than age 18 may be employed in hazardous work or between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m.

 The Government enacted the Employment (Employment of Children) Regulations 2012. The Regulations contain restrictions on the employment of children, penalties for violations, a list of hazardous activities prohibited to children under 18, and a list of activities considered light work.

 The list of hazardous activities includes prohibitions by different age groups of tasks in a variety of areas including several agricultural sectors, construction, mining, and urban informal work. The regulations also prohibit the use, procurement, or offering of a child for illicit activities, including the production and trafficking of drugs.

The Government also provides guidelines to serve as a tool for labor inspectors to identify incidences of hazardous child labor. The guidelines define hazardous work as exposure to dangerous machinery, carrying heavy loads, exposure to harassment, including physical, psychological, and sexual abuse, and work under strenuous conditions for long hours. Domestic service by children younger than age 14 is included in the list of hazardous occupations.

Primary education in Uganda is free and compulsory through age 12; however, fees for school supplies and operating costs are often prohibitive for families. The law leaves children ages 12 to 14 particularly vulnerable to the worst forms of child labor as they are not required to be in school nor are they legally permitted to work in areas other than light work.

The Prevention of Trafficking in Persons Act of 2009(PTIP) prohibits child trafficking and outlines penalties for violators. The Act also provides for protection, assistance, and support for trafficking victims and reparation to victims of trafficking to and from Uganda. The use of children to commit crimes is prohibited under the Act.

The Ugandan Constitution prohibits slavery and forced labor. Procuring or attempting to procure a girl under the age of 21 for sexual intent or to become a prostitute is prohibited under the Penal Code. However, boys under age 18 are not protected.

Prostitution, procurement, and pimping of a prostitute are illegal in Uganda. However, these laws only address female victims, leaving boys unprotected from prostitution.

The Penal Code penalizes intermediaries but does not appear to penalize clients. In addition, the Penal Code penalizes those who engage in prostitution, which leaves room for children who are procured or offered for prostitution to be treated as offenders rather than victims.

The production of pornography, regardless of the age of the subject, with the intent to distribute is illegal under the Penal Code and the Computer Misuse Act of 2011. There does not appear to be legislation specifically addressing the production or possession of child pornography.

The minimum age for voluntary military service in Uganda is 18, and there is no conscription for the military.

Key achievements 

The Ministry of Gender, Labour and social development has established a joint committee with the Ministry of Education and Sports to improve coordination on child labor and education.

A report on mainstreaming of child labour concerns in the ministry of education and sport s sector was finalized. The report review existing education related policies , plans and programme from the perspective of tackling child labour, assesses challenges and obstacles in returning out of school children to school and proposes strategies to support transition back to school based on a review of a number of successful community based reintegration projects.

The Uganda Police Force (UPF) within the Ministry of Internal Affairs has a Child and Family Protection Unit (CFPU) responsible for enforcing child labor laws. At lower-level police posts, staff members are designated as CFPU liaison officers to manage a child-related complaint system and respond to complaints.

By the end of November 2012, the CFPU had recorded 61 cases of child labor. Eighteen cases are reported to be under investigation while two are awaiting trial. Research did not find information about the investigation of the remaining cases. 

The Uganda Police employs 450 CFPU officers countrywide.
Uganda Women’s Efforts to Save Orphans (UWESO) has prevented over 700 children and 500 withdrawn from child labour and reintegrated into primary education of which 56% are girls.

What should be done to reduce child labour
According to the Federation of Ugandan Employers, employers should desist from employing children but should try to find alternatives for working children.
“Parents should send children to school especially now that there is Universal Primary Education (UPE) and teachers can teach the community about the evils of child labour.”


Tuesday 17 June 2014

Lighter skin is fair but Black is more beautiful


A number of women including high class ladies like Princess Komuntale, have been lured into bleaching their skin to look for beautiful. We have seen socialites like bad black, Vera Sidika who once had that beautiful black satin colour also try to get that fair light skin. Lighter skinned women are considered beautiful in most parts of the world for example USA, Philipinnes, Nigeria and now East Africa. 

Bad Black before bleaching


After bleaching
 Former city socialite Shanita Namuyimbwa well known as bad black also bleached her body and she was severely blasted by people on social media.

 
Bad Black before bleaching
 
After bleaching
Former Rubaga division mayor Peter Ssematimba is also said to be bleaching his body  allover and that explains the sudden change from black to brownish color. 
Peter Sematimba


Vera Sidika is sometimes dubbed "Kenya's Kim Kardashian", as - like Kardashian - she is famed for posting photos of her voluptuous backside on social media. But this time, it's not her bottom that's under scrutiny.


Vera before bleaching
On Friday night she gave an interview on Kenyan TV in which she spoke openly about the skin lightening treatment she has recently undergone. "Looking good is my business," she said matter-of-factly. "My body is my business, nobody else's but mine." Sidika said she'd had the skin lightening done in the UK and suggested it cost somewhere in the region of 15 million Kenyan shillings ($170,000; £100,000). She says she's already seen an increase in demand for her services.

Vera Sidika


The response on Kenyan social media was huge. "I was accused of promoting or endorsing a white-centred view of beauty for African girls by interviewing her," the host of the programme Larry Madowo told BBC Trending.


Vera before bleaching
 "The criticism was quite intense." NTV decided to run a follow-up programme to discuss skin lightening, and encouraged people to share their thoughts using #BleachedBeauty.
Bleaching creams work by stripping the skin of its natural pigmentation.
Vera after bleaching

However in dark skinned people the pigmentation is the skin’s natural protection from the sun`s strong radiations.

Vera after bleaching
Bleaching doesn’t just superficially lighten the skin it changes the skin’s normal structure removing and inhibiting the production of melanin by cells called melanocytes.

Once the skin has been ‘bleached’ it loses its natural protective barrier making it susceptible to damage by the sun’s radiations and it is the reason why most if not all bleach creams come with instructions advising people to use sun protection creams called sunscreens along with the product.
Persistent use of these bleaching products will leave the skin lighter but also leave it more vulnerable to damage.

Cameroonian/Nigerian pop singer, Dencia, before and after using skin lightening cream. She recently released her Whitenicious product.
In Kampala there are household names like Mama Lususu known for their magic wand when it comes to bleaching someone’s skin.
Skin bleaching is becoming trendy but hazardous and very expensive. A bleaching dose in this shop goes for between sh400, 000 and sh600, 000. 

One of the proprietors revealed to me that she makes up to sh4m on a daily basis. She also said the process of effective skin bleaching takes up to six days if creams and soap are properly and constantly used.

Many of these bleaching agents contain steroids, hydroquinone and mercury which can affect the body as drugs do, given the fact that they interfere with the production of melanin- group of naturally occurring dark pigments, especially the pigment found in skin.
In communities, the problem has not gone unattended to and last year, The International Anti-Corruption Theatre Movement (IATM), a pressure group against bleaching, indicated that thousands of women in Uganda use soaps containing mercury to obtain a lighter complexion without knowing the health hazards of using such soaps.
Mercury according to findings through Nordic Chemicals Group, the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland and Ms. Uganda, causes a number of health problems such as skin cancer and nervous disorder.
Steroids, on the other hand, could cause diabetes given that they increase the amount of sugar metabolism in the body thus worsening the infection, Dr. Karuhanga adds. He points out creams like Pimplex usually used to treat pimples, contain mercury which is reportedly poisonous.


According to mercuryexposure.org, mercury-based bleaching creams contain ammoniated mercury or mercrous chloride as a bleaching agent. Some of these creams may contain up to more than 2-5 per cent mercury that will be harmful to health, therefore resulting in mercury poisoning, especially chronic mercury poisoning.

Cameroonian/Nigerian pop singer, Dencia, before and after using skin lightening cream. She recently released her Whitenicious product.
“In the Minimata epidemic in Japan, there were 42 brain-damaged children in 400 live births. Only one of the mothers had no sign of having mercury poisoning.
Majority of the mothers had used mercury-based bleaching creams during their childbearing years,” mercuryexposure.org explains.



“The biggest problem is that by the time someone realises signs of the effects, the damage is already done.
In neighbouring Kenya, there has been a ban on bleaching creams with stringent laws and public campaigns have been launched to address the harmful effects of these products on the skin.
Much as effort has been taken to ban the importation of skin lightening creams, they are still in plenty and sold across the counter in most shops and on the roadside in Uganda.
Ideally, skin whitening could be advised to treat pigmentation (coloration of tissues by pigment) disorders like spotted skin tone, age spots, freckles- small, usually yellow or brown spots on the skin, often seen on the face and pregnancy marks.
Beyonce before and after bleaching

Unlike in India where lightening creams are very common, in Kenya, skin lightening remains quite hush-hush, and is generally done in small backstreet venues. Experts believe it's on the rise, and warn of the dangers of unregulated black market treatments.
Skin lightening has been an issue in Africa for some time and came to the fore earlier this year when Nigerian-Cameroonian pop star Dencia launched a cream called Whitenicious.
Nick Minaj before and after bleaching
 According to Dr. Pius Okong, a health consultant with St Francis Hospital Nsambya, this remains a big problem he attributes to inferiority complex where women are not satisfied with the colour of their skins and therefore go out to try and achieve a light complexion which comes with a price to pay. 


In most cases, the products have found their way to shops unchecked yet the effects of the chemicals used in making (such) products like soaps and creams, as Dr. Vincent Karuhanga explains, have been found to have adverse effects on unborn children, women and men.