Eliminating child labour in West Africa and strengthening sub-regional cooperation through ECOWAS (ECOWAS I)
In West African mines, fisheries, plantations, quarries, and street markets, large numbers of children (both boys and girls) are deprived access to schooling. In some cases, their very lives are at stake as many more children become actively engaged in child labour. With high rates of poverty in the region, many children—working as domestic servants, head carriers, prostitutes, field workers and cart pushers—are forced to resign any hope of freedom and security.
Cognizant of the suffering of child labourers and that high rates of poverty are no excuse for letting new generations of children miss opportunities for education and future access to decent employment, governments in the West Africa sub-region have taken firm steps towards the elimination of child labour, starting with its worst forms. This project seeks to contribute to national and sub-regional initiatives to combat the worst forms of child labour.
Main components | Achievements |
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Highlights
- An executive body of the social dialogue for ECOWAS met in May 2012 and the delegation of the sub-region met in a separate forum in ILC Geneva in June 2012.
- In Ghana, the support of the promulgation and dissemination of the National Plan of Action (NPA) and its integration into the DWCP, PRSP and UNDAF and the policy framework, was completed.
- The project held consultations, using Strategic Program Impact Framework (SPIF), with Ministry of Labour (Mol), social partners and other relevant national institutions to facilitate finalisation of the NPA and its endorsement by the tripartite constituents. This included specific components that would address WFCL in inland fishing cocoa and mines and quarries, in Ghana.
- The preliminary sub-national consultation meetings and regional workshops in project targeted zones (Cote d’Ivoire and Ghana) were organized by the ILO-IPEC’s ECOWAS project in August 2011.
- In Ghana, the project supported the government to develop a monitoring and evaluation framework for the NPA. The Child Labour Unit (CLU) presented the status of the NPA implementation to the NSC in August 2011.
- In Nigeria, a sensitization workshop for the members of the NSC was held from 9 to 10 May 2012 in Abuja. The workshop included sensitization on the child labour situation, and the response to that, understand the existing legislation and the gaps in implementation; the short term and long term solutions to meet the target of elimination of the worst forms of child labour; understand the role of the National Steering Committee; and understanding the individual responsibilities of members and organizations as opinion makers and champions of working against child labour.
- The establishment of a new ministry in Ghana, Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection (MOGCSP), brings a new national impetus to child protection in an advantageous context of social protection. The Project has met with the new Minister and plans to partner with the ministry to enhance the implementation of the NPA.
- Thus far, 260 law enforcement personnel have been trained on child labour issues.
- In RCI, the project has trained 30 Magistrates, 30 Police Officers (by 25-27 September 2013) and 36 Labour Inspectors (by August 2013).
- Under the Action Programme in Cote d’Ivoire on capacity building of stakeholders, an experience sharing workshop on stakeholders’ training was organized from 30 to 31 January 2013. It brought representatives from Benin, Ghana, Mali and Nigeria.
- The project, with the help of the media, organized on the national level the awareness raising of child trafficking and child labour from 11 to 14 June 2013.