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An important highlight of 2004 was the extension agreed to between the Ministry of Labor and the ILO in relation to the IPEC (International Program for the Elimination of Child Labor). On December 21, 2004, an MoU (Memorandum of Understanding) was executed to extend the ILO’s IPEC for another five years until December 31, 2009.
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The ILO-IPEC was launched in Pakistan in June 1994 and the main strategies adopted to implement the program included: |
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Awareness raising through social mobilization. |
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Strengthening institutions through capacity building and law and policy development. |
In August 1996, the program was extended up to December 31, 2001, and in October 2001, it was again extended up to December 2004.
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IPEC is implementing seven following major projects in Pakistan: |
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Project of Support for the National Time-Bound Program (TBP) to Help Eliminate the Worst Forms of Child Labor from Pakistan. |
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Combating Child Labor in the Carpet Industry (Phase II). |
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Combating Child Labor through Education and Training in the North West Frontier Province (Phase II). |
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Combating Hazardous and Exploitative Child in Surgical Instruments Manufacturing (Phase II). |
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Preventing and Eliminating Exploitative Child Domestic Work. |
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Activating Media in Combating Child Labor. |
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Combating Child Trafficking for Labor and Sexual Exploitation (Phase II, Pakistan Chapter). |
In addition, a few Core Action Programs targeting child domestic labor, to raise awareness among workers on worst forms of child labor, and research are in the process of phasing out.
Rapid Assessments
ILO-IPEC launched its Project of Support to the National Time-bound Program on WFCL in October 2003. This project targets child laborers working in hazardous conditions in Glass Bangles (Hyderabad District), Surgical Instruments Manufacturing (Sialkot District), Tanneries (Kasur District), Coal Mines (Shangla and Chakwal Districts), Rag-pickers (Rawalpindi District) and Deep Sea Fishing (Gwadar District).
Rapid Assessments (RA) and Occupational and Safety Health (OSH) Studies were carried out in the six targeted sectors (Sialkot, Kasur, Hyderabad, Rawalpindi, Shangla, Gwadar) as part of the Preparatory phase of Pakistan’s Time-Bound Program on the elimination of worst forms of child labor from Pakistan. (Complete Findings of RA and OSH Studies)
Rapid Assessment of Child Domestic Workers
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This rapid assessment was conducted by SPARC with the following broad objectives: |
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To assess the situation of the CDWs till the age of 18, in two vicinities (one slum and one posh area) of each city of Islamabad, Lahore, Karachi, Peshawar and Quetta. |
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To identify CDWs as project beneficiaries in five cities and assess their situation. |
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The assessment of the CDWs included: |
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Family backgrounds. |
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Socio-economic backgrounds. |
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Work conditions. |
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Living conditions. |
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Recreational and playtime as an important component of childhood development. |
The rapid assessment showed that child domestic workers in many ways were more exploited and abused than several other categories of child laborers. They were confined within their workplaces, while their employers determined their behavior. They had no fixed timings of work and no specific tasks assigned to them: work chores ranged from cooking, cleaning, laundering, gardening, grocery shopping, and baby-sitting.
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