Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06AMMAN8967
2006-12-18 14:47:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Amman
Cable title:  

WORST FORMS OF CHILD LABOR: UPDATE

Tags:  ELAB EIND ETRD PHUM SOCI USAID PREL JO 
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VZCZCXYZ0105
PP RUEHWEB

DE RUEHAM #8967/01 3521447
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 181447Z DEC 06
FM AMEMBASSY AMMAN
TO RUEHC/DEPT OF LABOR WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 6212
INFO RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA PRIORITY 0549
UNCLAS AMMAN 008967 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

PASS USTR/AROSENBERG
STATE FOR DRL/IL - TU DANG
ALSO FOR NEA/ELA
DOL/ILAB FOR TINA MCCARTER

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ELAB EIND ETRD PHUM SOCI USAID PREL JO
SUBJECT: WORST FORMS OF CHILD LABOR: UPDATE

REF: A. STATE 184972 B. 05 AMMAN 06925

UNCLAS AMMAN 008967

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

PASS USTR/AROSENBERG
STATE FOR DRL/IL - TU DANG
ALSO FOR NEA/ELA
DOL/ILAB FOR TINA MCCARTER

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ELAB EIND ETRD PHUM SOCI USAID PREL JO
SUBJECT: WORST FORMS OF CHILD LABOR: UPDATE

REF: A. STATE 184972 B. 05 AMMAN 06925


1. (SBU) In response to ref A, Post has contacted appropriate
ministries and NGOs in order to update Ref B reporting on the
worst forms of child labor in Jordan, and the efforts in
place to combat them. The bulk of the information reported
in Ref b remains accurate, and the worst forms of child
labor, as defined in ILO convention 182, are rare in Jordan.
Following is updated information on current initiatives to
combat child labor in Jordan, grouped by the source
organization and subject:


2. (U) IRC: The Information and Resource Center (IRC) of the
King Hussein Foundation was originally established by Queen
Noor in1995 as the National Task Force for Children. The IRC
has been conducting research on child labor for over one
year. In 2004, with funding from the Swiss Embassy in Amman,
the IRC undertook an effort focused on street children in
Irbid, a large city in northern Jordan, with a goal of
expanding the effort to areas of Amman. As of yet, there are
no published results.


3. (U) Questscope: UK-based Questscope, in coordination with
the Ministries of Labor (MOL),Education (MOE),and Social
Development (MoSD),implemented four projects aimed at
eliminating child labor. All four focus on underprivileged
children and those detained at juvenile centers.

-- The first project provides adult mentors for "at-risk"
youth. The mentor and child meet weekly for one-on-one
activities, and groups of mentors and children regularly go
on recreational outings or meet for educational activities.
The project considers each child's experience and specific
needs in partnering with organizations whose resources match
individual cases. The World Bank funded the mentoring
program until April 2005. The program is still operating,
though in a scaled-back manner, while Questscope seeks
additional funding.


-- The second project is dubbed "Earn & Learn." Citing
statistics that suggest some children provide 40% of their
families' income, often through menial work and potentially
dangerous jobs, the project aims to teach them vocational
skills to help them attain higher grades of employment. The
children start by participating in informal education classes
after normal working hours to earn a diploma from the MOE.
Those that earn the diploma are guaranteed one year of
vocational training. The Earn & Learn project is funded by
the European Union and sponsored by the MOE. Currently, 200
dropouts are taking part in the education classes, and there
are ten vocational training centers set up for the graduates.
Jordan's Development and Employment Fund provides
microfinance assistance to participants, enabling them to
start their own businesses.

-- The third project is similar to the "Earn and Learn"
program. "Educating Dropouts" is a 24-month informal
education program for students who have dropped out of high
school. Implemented in September 2006, 10 schools and 31
teachers are involved in the program, which offers courses in
six core areas (English, Arabic, Religion, Math, Sciences,
and Social Skills),provides a certificate that is the
equivalent of a high school degree, and which enables the
students to enroll in specialized vocational courses.

-- The fourth project is a partnership initiative with the
Greater Amman Municipality in which four charitable societies
have opened their spaces to offer classes for underprivileged
children. The Municipality offers funding, and the classes
are for children who have been truant for 6-8 months or who
are considered "drop-outs".


4. (SBU) The National Council for Family Affairs (NCFA): The
NCFA was established by royal decree, and started official
operations in 2001. In November 2006, the NCFA in
conjunction with the Ministry of Labor (MOL) announced a new
National Strategy to combat child labor. They are currently
drafting an Action Plan, which they expect to release in
January 2007. Also in January, they plan to publish a report
on Child Labor in Jordan, which they have researched with
UNICEF. The NCFA shares the original mandate of the National
Task Force for Children to advance the interests of Jordanian
youth. The NCFA, however, has the expanded goal of ensuring
a better life for Jordanian families. The NCFA is
quasi-governmental, and provides policy recommendations and
advocacy. It also facilitates coordination between the GOJ

and the NGO community. The issue of child labor falls under
the responsibility of the Childhood Unit at the NCFA, and it
has worked hand in hand with Questscope on both the mentoring
and Earn & Learn projects.


5. (U) Ministry of Labor (MOL): In November 2006, the MOL and
the NCFA launched a National Strategy on Child Labor in
Jordan, and established a committee to combat child labor
consisting of representatives from the Ministries of Labor,
Education, and Planning as well as the National Center for
Human Rights (NCHR). Among its recommendations: that the
Ministry of Interior enhance the Penal Code and the 2006
Juvenile Code to criminalize begging by children under age
16, and to change the rules governing the assistance given to
poor families from the National Aid Fund by the Ministry of
Social Development. The National Agenda for reform
(published in January, 2006) has set aside 500,000 JD for
2007 to tackle the problem of child labor, and plans to hire
labor inspectors (with authority to arrest) to inspect work
places, and to take 16-18 year olds to Vocational Training
Centers that offer free training courses.


6. (SBU) International Labor Organization (ILO): In January
2004, the MOL announced a US$1 million ILO project to combat
child labor in Jordan. The project was to be implemented in
coordination with the MOE and MoSD, and aimed to rehabilitate
working children under 18 years of age, sending them back to
school while helping their families to earn a living. The
project set the lofty goal of benefiting 500 families within
three years. To date, this project has barely gotten off the
ground. The current ILO administrator says that her
predecessor had trouble organizing the project, but that work
on a rehabilitation center is ongoing. At the end of 2005,
the ILO inaugurated the National Program to Eliminate Child
Labor in Jordan. This program is operated in conjunction with
the Ministries of Labor, Education, Social Development, and
Industry and Commerce, as well as the Jordan Chamber of
Industry, the General Federation of Jordanian Trade Unions,
and the Jordanian Hashemite Fund for Human Development.
Currently there are two schools operating under the program,
which teaches, in addition to general education, English and
computer skills. The school for girls is in Zarqa and the
school for boys is in Sahab. The ILO has also worked closely
with Questscope in Zarqa on the "Educating Drop-outs"
program.


7. (U) SCREAM - Stop Child Labor: The Ministry of Labor's
Child Labor Unit (CLU) initiated this ILO-IPEC (International
Program on the Elimination of Child Labor) program to raise
the awareness of young people about child labor. NOTE:
According to a 2002 CLU study, 32,000 children are working
throughout Jordan. END NOTE. The program consists of 14
modules in arts, education, and media. It conducted its
first workshop in June 2004 to train 38 educators and
volunteers on child labor and its negative consequences.
Since then, it has conducted subsequent workshops at public
universities in Jordan. The CLU is now working on an
initiative to introduce the SCREAM modules in private
universities, with the goal of incorporating them in a formal
degree program on child protection studies.


8. (U) Pending Legislation: Jordan has signed the UN
Convention on the Rights of the Child, and it was endorsed by
Parliament in October 2006. A new draft bill on Child's
Rights, Development and Protection is on the agenda for the
current session of Parliament. In 2003, King Abdullah issued
a royal decree increasing the minimum age of workers to 18,
and the Ministry of Labor has issued instructions to its
inspectors to enforce this change. Jordan has ratified ILO
convention 138 which raises the minimum working age to 18,
and ILO Convention 182, which calls for the elimination of
the worst forms of child labor.


9. (SBU) The National Center for Human Rights (NCHR),the
NCFA, and UNICEF are jointly working on addressing child
labor on two fronts: through the pending child rights law,
and by amending current laws. Current labor law does provide
some measure of protection for working children. It limits
the workday of a minor (defined as under 18) to six hours,
and provides for a one-hour break after four continuous hours
of work. Also, working hours for children must be between
6:00am and 8:00pm. In practice, this law is not always
strictly observed. The same 2002 CLU report revealed that 19
percent of children worked at least 10-hour days.


10. (SBU) The street scene: Child beggars are present on some
streets in Amman. Some of these children are reportedly
forced to beg by their parents. While there is no empirical
evidence of sexual abuse, there are suspicions among the NGO
community that this does occur, however infrequently. These
children are vulnerable to exploitation, both by their
families and by those who seek to employ them. The Ministry
of Social Development's (MoSD) anti-vagrancy campaign works
to detain and investigate the child beggars, and to prosecute
those who exploit them. According to the MoSD, on average 20
child beggars are rounded up daily. Detained children must
be picked up by a parent or guardian. However, there is
currently no fine or penalty assessed against the parents.
Consequently, there is no financial incentive for families to
keep their children from returning to the street. A
USAID-funded short-term assessment team has also discovered
instances of children working in textile factories in the
Qualified Industrial Zones (QIZs).


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