Most
widespread forms of child slavery revealed by new Save the Children report
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Small Hands of Slavery. This eight year-old child domestic worker works in the home of a
Kolkata family in India and has been employed since the age of five. She attends the Right
| Child trafficking | 1.2 million children and babies are trafficked every year, including into Western Europe, the Americas and the Caribbean, and the number is increasing.
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| Child prostitution | At any one time across the world, around 1.8 million children are being abused through prostitution, child pornography and sex
tourism.
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| Bonded child labour | Millions of children are forced to work away their childhood in horrific conditions to pay off debt, or simply the interest on it.
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| Forced work in mines | One million children are risking their lives in
mines and quarries in more than 50 African, Asian and South American countries.
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| Agricultural labour | 132 million children
under 15 are trapped working in agriculture, often exposed to pesticides, heavy machinery, machetes and axes.
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| Child soldiers | 300,000 children under 15 are involved with fighting forces, including government armies. Boys and girls in at least 13 countries are actively being recruited as child soldiers
or as army 'wives'.
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| Forced child marriage | Child marriage, which often includes mail order and internet brides, is one of
the most widespread - yet hidden - forms of slavery. Girls as young as four are forced to live and have sex with their husband, and are often kept trapped indoors.
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| Domestic slavery | Millions of children across the world, some as young as six, are forced to
work up to 15 hour days as domestic workers. Many are beaten, starved and sexually abused.
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- address and ensure the eradication of child slavery through their own policies on global poverty reduction.
- invest sufficient money and resources to protect child associated with slavery.
- implement international standards on the worst forms of child labour where children in slavery are found.
- put in place protection programmes, including recovery and rehabilitation, to offer emergency and long-term support to all children trapped in slavery-like conditions.
- ensure education is offered in ways that support the removal of children involved in the worst forms of child labour; for example, that it is accessible, flexible and affordable.
- lobby their MPs to make the elimination of child slavery a priority.
- support fair trade initiatives that protect the rights of child labourers.
For more information
Save the Children UK Press Office: +44 (0)207 012 6841Email address: media@savethechildren.org.uk
[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]








