News Release
ILAB News Release: [02/17/2004]
Contact Name: Mike Biddle
Phone Number: (202) 693-5051
Labor Department Launches U.S.India Child
Labor Project
NEW DELHI, IndiaThe Department of Labor (DOL), the International
Labor Organization (ILO) and the government of India today launched
a $40 million project to combat exploitive and hazardous child
labor in India.
"This project will remove children from exploitive conditions,
provide educational alternatives for child laborers, and increase
awareness of laws in India that restrict child labor practices,"
said U.S. Secretary of Labor Elaine L. Chao. "We appreciate
the Indian government's partnership with our Department's worldwide
effort to eliminate the worst forms of child labor. Now we need
to get to work and get results."
Dubbed the "INDUS project," this new cooperative venture
is the Department's largest international technical assistance
program. Its goal is to help eliminate child labor in ten hazardous
industries in India, including: cigarette-making; brassware; bricks;
fireworks; footwear; bangles; locks; matches; quarried stones;
and silk. In addition, India has agreed to conduct a review of
existing child-labor elimination efforts in the carpet-making
industry.
The INDUS project will draw from the International Labor Organization's
International Program on the Elimination of Child Labor (IPEC)
and other organizations' experience, to achieve immediate and
lasting results in eliminating child labor in hazardous industries.
The U.S. DOL will also work with India's Ministry of Labor's National
Child Labor Projects and its Department of Education's Sarva Shiksha
Abhiyan (Education for All) program, which seeks to ensure universal
primary education for children ages 6-14 by the year 2010.
U.S. DOL and the government of India have dedicated $20 million
each toward the project. By prior agreement, the Department's
contribution to the program will be administered by IPEC. The
project will be implemented in 20 districts in the Indian states
of Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and Uttar Pradesh.
In August 2000, U.S. DOL and the Indian Ministry of Labor signed
a Joint Statement of Enhanced Cooperation on the Elimination of
Child Labor. The agreement committed both nations to support an
ILO/IPEC project to eliminate child labor in specified hazardous
industries.
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