June 1st — World Children's Day. We are accustomed to thinking about protection from war, diseases, and violence. But there is another threat: child labor. In the world, 160 million children work instead of studying and playing. They dig, wash, crawl under the ground. Not for wages, but for a bowl of rice. June 1st is the day when we should say: "Childhood is not for work." We tell about the scale of the problem, the struggle, and how everyone can help.
According to the UN, in 2026, there are 160 million children aged 5-17 engaged in child labor worldwide. This is every 10th child. The most in Africa (72 million), Asia (62 million), Latin America (13 million). 80% of children work in agriculture, 12% in the service sector, 8% in industry (including mines).
70 million children are engaged in hazardous work: with pesticides, in mines, on construction sites, with sharp tools. Every year, from 10,000 to 30,000 children die on the job.
In Russia, child labor is prohibited. But according to unofficial data, children work on markets, in auto repair shops, picking berries and mushrooms (often migrants). There is no accurate statistics.
Poverty. Families cannot feed their children, and the child is forced to earn a living. In African countries, a child's income can be half of the family's income. Cultural traditions. In some societies, working is the norm. A child must "help." Lack of schools. If there is no school or it is far away, parents send children to work. Conflicts and migration. Child refugees often work in the black market without documents.
Debts. Parents send children into bonded labor for a loan.
Corruption. Labor inspections do not work, and employers benefit from using cheap child labor.
Mines. Children extract cobalt, tin, gold in Africa. They work 12 hours a day without a protective mask, breathing toxic dust. Many die from collapses. Agriculture. On cocoa plantations (Côte d'Ivoire), children work with machetes, pesticides. Poisoning, cuts, injuries. Clothing production (Bangladesh, India). Children sew T-shirts for global brands in hot workshops, 14 hours a day. Fatigue, poor lighting, fire risk.
Heavy street work: selling goods, collecting garbage, washing cars. Risk of accidents, violence. Sexual exploitation. Millions of children, mainly girls, are involved in prostitution (India, Thailand, Philippines).
The International Labor Organization (ILO) created Convention 182 (1999) on the prohibition of the worst forms of child labor. It has been ratified by almost all countries. However, enforcement is lacking. UNICEF fights on the ground: builds schools, provides allowances to families so that children can study.
Brands (Nestlé, Mars, Nike) are introducing "certification" under public pressure: checking supply chains for child labor. The problem: they often turn a blind eye.
In 2026, the "Red Card for Child Labor" program was launched — football clubs and stars (Messi, Ronaldo) call for a boycott of goods produced by children.
Buy goods with Fair Trade labeling (fair trade). This guarantees that child labor was not used in production. Chocolate, coffee, bananas, cotton. Do not buy goods from suspicious producers (cheap clothing from suspicious sources).
Sign petitions. For example, "Stop Child Labor on Cocoa Plantations." Donate to funds (UNICEF, Save the Children, "Russian Committee for Assistance"). Spread information. The more people know, the more pressure on corporations.
On World Children's Day (June 1st), you can organize a charity run, raise funds for a school in Africa.
The Labor Code of the Russian Federation prohibits child labor before the age of 14. From 14 to 16 — only light work in free time from study (with the consent of parents and guardianship authorities). From 16 years old — full capacity, but with restrictions (no harmful work). Child labor at night, on weekends, and holidays is prohibited.
Offenders are fined (up to 100,000 rubles). However, cases of child labor exist: in the service sector, agriculture, in circuses (acrobats). Especially affected are children of migrants (from Central Asia), who work on markets, construction sites.
In 2025, a "hotline" for protecting children's rights from labor exploitation was created in Russia. You can call 8-800-...
On World Children's Day, June 1st, let us remember not only our own children but also those whose childhood has been stolen. Those who at 10 years old carry ore in a mine instead of solving math problems. We cannot save everyone. But we can start with ourselves: not to buy chocolate from suspicious producers, not to turn a blind eye, to sign a petition. Every ruble, every voice, every like is a brick in the wall of protection.
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