UZBEKISTAN: German Rights Official Criticizes Tashkent's Reliance on Child Labour


In a landmark statement coming from a European official, Markus Lƶning, Germanyā€™s federal commissioner for human rights, has demanded that Uzbekistan cease using child labor in harvesting cotton, and has called for inspections to be carried out by the International Organization of Labor (ILO).

Uzbekistan has come under increasing pressure in recent years for its continuing reliance on forced child labor to help gather the countryā€™s all-important cash crop, cotton. Tashkent is a signatory to two ILO pacts, known as Convention 182 and Convention 138, which together seek to eliminate the use of child labor. President Islam Karimovā€™s administration also issued a decree in 2008 pledging to eliminate the practice in Uzbekistan. However, human rights monitors have found abundant evidence that children continue to be forced out into Uzbekistanā€™s cotton fields to participate in the harvest.

In a statement issued November 9, Lƶning called on Uzbekistan to honor its commitments. ā€œI am greatly concerned by continued reports of child labor being used in cotton harvesting,ā€ the statement said.

ā€œUzbekistan is obliged under international agreements to combat child labor,ā€ the statement continued. ā€œI therefore call on the Uzbek government to clear up these accusations and finally let observers from the International Labor Organization into the country.ā€

Lƶningā€™s statement followed a complaint brought by the Berlin-based European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights, seeking to draw attention to the Uzbek child labor issue by using procedures developed by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. The complaint specifically targeted seven European corporate buyers of Uzbek cotton. More than 65 of the worldā€™s largest retailers, including Walmart, The Gap, Marks & Spencer, and Target are boycotting Uzbek cotton largely because of the countryā€™s use of up to 2 million school children, as well as university students, to harvest the crop each fall.

Lƶningā€™s comments constitute perhaps the sharpest European Union criticism to date of Uzbekistanā€™s child-labor practices. ILO experts have so far not been allowed to verify Uzbekistanā€™s compliance with its treaty commitments.

In 2008, an investigative report prepared by the International Labor Rights Forum (ILRF), found that children as young as six experienced an interruption to their academic routines and were press-ganged into service in the cotton fields. ā€œThe government of Uzbekistan has claimed credit for ratification of the ILO conventions prohibiting child labor, but has taken no serious measures to engage in work with the ILO to develop an action plan, or even undertake a credible assessment of the problem, the ILRF report said.

Originally published by EurasiaNet.org

Further information

Ā 

pdf: http://www.eurasianet.org/node/62365

Please note that these reports are hosted by CRIN as a resource for Child Rights campaigners, researchers and other interested parties. Unless otherwise stated, they are not the work of CRIN and their inclusion in our database does not necessarily signify endorsement or agreement with their content by CRIN.