BEIRUT: With child labor soaring in Lebanon following the outbreak of war in Syria, the UN published on Wednesday the first guide in Arabic to help farmers and officials seeking to protect them from risks like sexual abuse and injury.
Children as young as five, largely Syrian refugees and poor Lebanese, are missing out on school and harming their health by working on farms, especially in remote, rural regions like the Beqaa, it said.
“Abuse and exploitation is widespread,” Frank Hagemann, ILO’s deputy director for Arab States told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone.
More than 9 million, or almost one in 10 children in the Middle East and North Africa are child laborers, mostly working in agriculture, International Labour Organization (ILO) data shows.
“It has been fueled by the refugee influx, by the need of refugee families to earn a livelihood, by their economic misery,” Hagemann said.
Lebanon has more than one million Syrian refugees, including nearly 500,000 children, after a government crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in 2011 led to civil war, and Daesh militants used the chaos to seize territory in Syria and Iraq.
The guide, co-written with the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), includes information on the risks child laborers face, for example sexual abuse, contamination from pesticides and missing out on their right to education.
UN seeks to protect young children from work on farms in Lebanon
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