A boy selling flowers in the street of Phnom Penh (Photo: Mom Sophon, RFA) |
Phnom Penh (Cambodia), June 12 (Xinhua): Cambodia on Tuesday observed the 11th World Day Against Child Labor with photo exhibition and children music festival.
Presided over by Permanent Deputy Prime Minister Men Sam On and Information Minister Khieu Kanharith, the photo exhibition attracted about 700 spectators, most of which are found children and teenagers.
Co-organized by Cambodian Ministry of Information, International
Labour Organization and China’s Xinhua News Agency, the Cambodian
children-themed exhibition showcased around 60 photos, which vividly
visualized the dramatic changes of local children’s life in the past
decades.
Some of the pictures also reflected Cambodian senior
leaders’ caring to the children, from the monarchy to the country’s
high- ranking ministers.
“The event reflects the government’s particular attention to enhance
children’s rights and social activity participation and it also
significantly contributes to uplift the value of children, maintain
national identification, and develop culture,” Men Sam On said at the
closing ceremony of the Music Festival for Children, which is organized
by the Ministry of Information.
“The music festival provides opportunities to children to show their
performing abilities and talents,” she said, adding that children and
teenagers together make up about half of Cambodia’s 14.5 million
population.
Khieu Kanharith said that the music festival functions as a platform
to promote children rights and to preserve and develop national art and
culture.
He said the music festival has been opened since May 22 with 22
children-orchestras from various state-owned and private-owned schools.
The champion team will be awarded 2,000 U.S. dollars plus a trophy.
As a result, the team from the state-owned School for Music and Fine Arts won the award.
The World Day Against Child Labor was launched in 2002 by the
international Labor Organization (ILO) to serve as a catalyst for the
growing worldwide movement against child labor.
In Cambodia, the ILO’s most recent global estimate found that around
1.5 million children involved in child labour and about 310, 000 in the
Worst Forms of Child Labour, for instance, working in salt fields and
brick factories.
Besides the government-organized events to mark the day, a well-
known local right group Licadho announced that it will mark the day on
Tuesday afternoon in Battambang province to promote understanding of
child labor and invite some 500 people to join the event.
The event is to encourage parents, guardians, youths, employers,
local authorities, and members of the public to participate in the
prevention and elimination of the worst form of child labor, said a
Licadho’s press release.
“As the standard of living rises in Cambodia, more people are looking
to hire domestic workers,” said Sao Seny, Licadho’s senior monitor on
child rights. “A shortage of labor leads some to hire children as
domestic workers, and they are most vulnerable to abuses such as
physical violence, verbal abuse, emotional abuse and sexual abuse.”
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