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Child labour

Chinese government pledge to double wages gets reality check

As a senior government official announced plans on 18 April to increase wages by around 15 percent annually, and double wages by 2015, a 20-minute clip was posted on the Chinese video sharing site Youku showing the harsh reality for teenage workers in a Dongguan factory.

The Guardian: Apple report reveals child labour increase

Apple found more than 91 children working at its suppliers last year, nine times as many as the previous year, according to its annual report on its manufacturers. The US company has also acknowledged for the first time that 137 workers were poisoned at a Chinese firm making its products and said less than a third of the facilities it audited were complying with its code on working hours.

Village school children killed in explosion at illegal firecracker workshop

An explosion at an illegal firecracker workshop in Guangxi has left 13 village school children dead and injured. All the victims were “left-behind children” whose parents were working in factories hundreds of kilometers away in neighbouring Guangdong.

SCMP: Education rights should be a priority

China Labour Bulletin appears in the following article. Copyright remains with the original publisher.

Liz Heron
Updated on Jun 12, 2009

Child labour remains a widespread and serious problem in China

Ten years after the adoption of the International Labour Organization’s Convention on the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labour on 12 May 1999, there is little evidence that the Chinese government, which ratified the convention in 2002, is making a determined effort to tackle the problem.

Daily Telegraph: Wal-Mart launches stinging attack on Chinese suppliers

China  Labour  Bulletin  appears  in  this article. Copyright remains with the original publisher

By Richard Spencer in Beijing
Last Updated: 5:27PM BST 22 Oct 2008

Child workers beaten to death and raped – families denied compensation

Child workers in China are particularly vulnerable to crime and exploitation because they lack the ability to protect themselves. Moreover, when victims' families seek compensation, they are often ignored, lied to and harassed. Photo by Sonya @flickr.com

Those Left Behind

There are 110 million migrant workers in China aged between 16 and 40 years old.  They left home in the hope of building a better life for themselves and their family, yet when they start a family of their own, they are faced with a stark choice; either take their children to the cities and subject them to institutionalized discrimination, or leave them behind in the countryside in the uncertain care of relatives.


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