Европейский
Союз должен
обсуждать
вопрос
детского
принудительного
труда в сборе
хлопка в
Узбекистане!
Призыв к
расследованию
использования
принудительного
детского
труда в сборе
хлопка в
Узбекистане
Джоанна
Ewart-Джеймс(Joanna Ewart-James),
Координатор организации
Международное
Противодействие
против
Рабовладечества:
"Если
не будут предприяты
решительные
действия, то
этой осенью
правительство
Узбекистана снова
заставит
сотни тысяч
детей
оставлять школьные
парты чтобы
собирать хлопок.
Пока официальное
исследование
независимого
мониторинга
не докажет,
что
использование
принудительного
детского
труда прекратилось,
ЕС должен
отменить свое
предпочтение
торговому
сотрудничеству
с Узбекистаном,
и обсуждение
этого
вопроса могло
быть полезным
в рамках
прекрашения злоупотребления
правами
человека."
EMBARGO until Midnight, Thursday, June 9
Calls for international community to investigate forced child labour in
Uzbekistan
To mark World
Day Against Child Labour (Sunday 12 June) human rights
groups have called for an international investigation to expose the use of
forced child labour in Uzbekistan’s cotton industry.
The investigation was called for at the International Labour Organisation’s
(ILO) annual conference in Geneva by Anti-Slavery International and
International Labour Rights Forum. A high-level ILO monitoring mission would be
the necessary first step in providing an independent credible assessment of the
problem.
Each autumn, schools are closed down and hundreds of thousands of children are
forced out of their classrooms and into the fields to pick the cotton harvest
in Uzbekistan, the world’s third largest exporter of cotton.
While Uzbekistan officially denies the use of forced
child labour in its country, and has so far failed to invite an ILO monitoring
mission, officials did pledge in Geneva on Monday 6 June to have a government
controlled trade union act as an official monitor.
The ILO’s Committee on Application of Standards, in a
decision issued on Wednesday 8 June after a hearing earlier in this week, questioned
the credibility of Uzbekistan’s proposal and also called for the government to
accept a high level ILO monitoring mission.
Speaking in Geneva, Brian Campbell, Policy Director at International Labour
Rights Forum, said: “Uzbekistan’s intention to monitor its own harvest for a problem
it denies is ludicrous. Such monitoring cannot be considered credible in a
country where independent civil society is controlled and critical media
muzzled. If the government has nothing to hide then it should allow the ILO
access during the harvest.”
The European Union is a major destination for Uzbek
cotton. The EU currently grants preferential trading access to exports from
Uzbekistan under a scheme to support developing economies. However, this can be
suspended in cases of serious human rights violations.
Joanna Ewart-James, Anti-Slavery International’s
Supply Chain Co-ordinator, said: “Unless drastic action is taken, this autumn
the government of Uzbekistan will force hundreds of thousands of children to
abandon their education and pick cotton once again. Until an official
investigation by an independent monitor is able to prove that the use of forced
child labour has ended then the EU must revoke trade preferences that could be
argued are rewarding Uzbekistan for committing human rights abuses.”
For further media information contact: Paul Donohoe, Anti-Slavery International: +44 20 7501 8934, +44
7779 624385 p.donohoe@antislavery.org; or Brian
Campbell, International Labor Rights Forum: +1 202
701 3021 brian.campbell@ilrf.org.