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Viewing cable 10NDJAMENA84, CHAD: INFORMATION ON CHILD LABOR AND FORCED LABOR FOR DOL

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
10NDJAMENA84 2010-02-08 16:48 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Ndjamena
VZCZCXRO0860
RR RUEHGI
DE RUEHNJ #0084/01 0391648
ZNR UUUUU ZZH ZDK ZUI RUEHAE 7039 SVC. VOL ALL OTHERS
R 081648Z FEB 10
FM AMEMBASSY NDJAMENA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 7671
RUEAUSA/LABOR DEPT WASHDC
INFO RHEHNSC/NSC WASHDC
RUEHDS/AMEMBASSY ADDIS ABABA 1037
RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON 1819
RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS 2390
RUEHGI/AMEMBASSY BANGUI 1605
RUEHYD/AMEMBASSY YAOUNDE 0001
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 12 NDJAMENA 000084 
 
SENSITIVE 
SIPDIS 
 
STATE FOR AF 
STATE FOR AF/C 
STATE FOR INR 
STATE FOR EEB 
STATE FOR S/USSES 
STATE FOR USAID 
STATE FOR G/TIP 
 
LABOR DEPT FOR ILAB - L. STROTKAMP, R. RIGBY, T. MCCARTER 
LABOR ALSO FOR ILCSR - S. MORGAN 
 
NSC FOR GAVIN 
 
LONDON FOR POL - LORD 
 
PARIS FOR POL - BAIN AND KANEDA 
 
ADDIS ABABA FOR AU 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: ELAB EIND ETRD KTIP PHUM SOCI
SUBJECT:  CHAD:  INFORMATION ON CHILD LABOR AND FORCED LABOR FOR DOL 
CONGRESSIONAL REORTING REQUIREMENTS 
 
REF: A) 09 STATE 131997, B) 09 N'DJAMENA 0053, C) N'DJAMENA 32 
 
NDJAMENA 00000084  001.2 OF 012 
 
 
 
------- 
SUMMARY 
------- 
 
1.  (U)  Chad is a developing central African country still 
recovering from nearly successful coups d'etat in 2005/06 and 
serious rebel incursions from a neighboring country in 2008/09. 
Eighty per cent of its 11 million people are engaged in subsistence 
farming or herding, and living primarily under the rule of 
traditional African customary law overlaid by colonial-era French 
legal arrangements.  Poverty is widespread (per capita income is 
about USD 640 per year); 70-75 per cent of the government's revenues 
are derived from the only significant source of wealth, a modest 
petroleum production of 120,000 barrels per day.  In this context, 
Embassy N/Djamena supplies the following responses to questions in 
Ref A, with available information keyed to assigned categories. 
Unless otherwise indicated, information is derived from Post 
conversations with officials at the Chadian Ministries of Labor, 
Justice, and Human Rights, the Chadian National Army, and UNICEF, 
UNFPA, UNHCR, ICRC, CARE, OIE, World Vision, IMF and World Bank. 
END SUMMARY. 
 
------------ 
TASK 1/TVPRA 
------------ 
 
2.  (U)  NOTE:  Having ascertained that no good produced in Chad 
appears on the current TVPRA list (cf. Ref A, para 14), post 
provides information requested in Ref A, para 15 on the following 
five goods: crude oil, cotton, gum Arabic, sugar, and livestock (to 
include cattle and hides, goats, sheep, and camels).  These goods 
are listed, with one exception, in the order of their estimated 
commercial value for the latest year available.  In post's view it 
is advisable to compress the six categories contained in Ref A's 
reporting instructions into a single narrative for those goods which 
manifestly involve no discernible forced labor or child labor.)  END 
NOTE. 
 
GOOD - PETROLEUM/CRUDE OIL 
-------------------------- 
 
3.  (U)  Sections (1A)-(1F):  The production of crude oil in Chad is 
accomplished by a consortium of three international oil companies 
led by a subsidiary of Exxon Mobil known as Esso-Chad.  This is the 
only industry in the country consistently producing a commodity or 
good of high value.  (Royalties/taxes to the GoC in 2009 totaled 
nearly USD 400 million.)   As the primary operating partner, 
Esso-Chad sets strict safety standards in keeping with international 
norms, which it meets every year.  The precise and/or technical 
nature of its work, and the high profile of the firm, make 
employment of forced labor or child labor virtually impossible. 
Embassy officers are in frequent communication with Esso-Chad's 
management at all levels, and also with international financial 
institutions and some local NGOs - all of whose staff take a strong 
interest in the consortium's work practices.  None have ever 
mentioned forced labor/child labor in any part of the petroleum 
enterprise.  To the contrary, Exxon Mobil in Chad is regarded as a 
model company, particularly in respect to continuing good community 
relations and environmental consciousness.  It has been acknowledged 
as such by the Department of State, among other organizations.  In 
short, petroleum production is both too lucrative and too important 
for the producers as well as the national government involved to 
 
NDJAMENA 00000084  002.2 OF 012 
 
 
risk jeopardizing their earnings with inherently dubious and 
inefficient work practices such as child labor/forced labor. 
 
GOOD - COTTON 
------------- 
 
4.  (U)  Sections (1A-1F):  Cotton is the third-largest product of 
the Chadian economy in terms of annual dollar value.  Latest 
official statistics available from the GoC are for 2007, which show 
an approximate total value of USD 35 million.  Some of the reasons 
for which Chad's cotton production is of relatively low value 
include that, like every other commercial endeavor except petroleum, 
cotton farming/marketing is low-tech, manual-labor intensive, and 
prone to both government and semi-private mismanagement.  Because 
hand labor is employed to a considerable extent, there are 
occasional suspicions that exploitive child labor may be involved, 
particularly since many of the primary cotton growers are informal, 
non-regulated, often family-owned farms.  Despite apparent 
opportunity, post has found no hard evidence of forced 
labor/exploitive child labor in this agricultural sector.  Ministry 
of Labor officials say they have no record of any cases being 
prosecuted, complaints filed, or labor inspector discovery of 
instances of abusive labor practices in the cotton sector.  In 
conversation with local UNICEF officials, cotton production was 
never mentioned as an area of concern.  Post concludes that the 
prevalence of forced labor/exploitive child labor is very low. 
 
GOOD - GUM ARABIC 
----------------- 
 
5.  (U)  Sections (1A-1F):  One of the less significant goods (in 
terms of total production value) but a steady minor export earner at 
about USD 4 million in 2007, the gum arabic sector of the 
agriculture part of Chad's economy has very occasionally been 
mentioned as a possible location for exploitive child labor.  The 
work is relatively simple, albeit usually performed under harsh 
desert conditions, and job sites are isolated and far from most 
urban areas.  Probably there are a few incidents of poor families 
"renting" or selling a child to a producer.  But as with cotton and 
sugar, the Ministry of Labor has no record of any forced 
labor/exploitive child labor having been reported or discovered in 
2009 or years past.  Post reports on this good only to complete 
coverage of the larger items of production. 
 
GOOD - SUGAR 
------------ 
 
6.  (U)  Sections (1A-1F):  Sugar is grown and marketed internally 
in Chad, but the country can only produce about 25,000MT per year, 
which supplies one-fourth of the country's needs.  The remainder is 
imported from more efficient producers in DR Congo, Cameroon, and 
Brazil.  Post reports on this product only to complete the list of 
chief goods turned out by Chad, and also to note a strong opinion 
about the absence of child labor in this sector.  A high-ranking 
Ministry of Labor official, who served for several years as a labor 
inspector, told emboffs that he was convinced there were no underage 
children working in the sugar cane fields even thogh there are 
frequently children to be found at he fields.  He gave two reasons: 
a) all sugar cne is cut by hand in Chad (in the absence of any 
mechanization) and this hard work requires adult strength and 
determination, particularly since work is usually performed between 
midnight and 5 a.m., when the heat is least intense; and b) women 
frequently bring their young children with them (and thus create the 
impression that the children are being exploited) when the reality 
is that there are no child care facilities available in villages. 
 
NDJAMENA 00000084  003.2 OF 012 
 
 
 
GOOD - LIVESTOCK: 
CATTLE, BEEF, HIDES, GOATS, SHEEP, CAMELS 
----------------------------------------- 
 
7.  (U)  Section (1A-D):  Livestock, particularly cattle and hides, 
is the second most important category of good produced in Chad, at a 
value in 2008 of about USD 42 million.  This is the one good 
produced where there is a common perception that child labor, 
perhaps of an exploitive nature, is employed.  Animal herds are 
moved long distances in the country every year, following 
traditional routes in search of water and pasture as the seasons 
change.  A considerable number of herders is needed, and poor 
families are commonly believed to "rent" or even "sell" one or more 
of their young children for this labor.  Ministry of Labor officials 
and UNICEF staff acknowledge that the practice does in fact occur, 
although no one has hard numbers.  The understanding that the 
practice violates rights is slowly entering the public consciousness 
in Chad; for many it the way things have always been done.  The fact 
that children undergo tribal initiation rites to adulthood at 
puberty contributes to the perception that they can be gainfully 
employed upon initiation.  Ministry of Labor officials also point to 
the fact that while education is technically free, many Chadians 
cannot afford to pay even the modest amounts necessary for textbooks 
and uniforms, and thus take their children out of school even before 
compulsory primary education ends at age 11.  It is well documented 
that only about 30 per cent of Chadian youth remain in school beyond 
primary grades, in part because secondary schools are scarce in the 
countryside.  Thus many children are available for work as herders 
starting at around age 11. 
 
8.  (U)  Section 1E-F:  The Ministry of Labor has no firm data on 
the numbers of child laborers who may be employed as herders or 
exploited by this type of work.  There are ongoing public campaigns 
to sensitize the population to the dangers of giving, renting or 
selling one's children to others to work in this sector, but 
Ministry of Labor contacts tell us that the country and its culture 
has not fully accepted that the practice is unacceptable.  UNICEF 
has advised Chad on the need to attempt to eliminate child herding 
over time by focusing on construction of schools, but there have 
been few major efforts by other NGOs to combat this type of child 
labor.  Clearly, the staffing and content level of both elementary 
and secondary school systems must be increased, and incentives 
provided for attendance, particularly in rural areas where most 
child herders are found.  There is little point in removing children 
from their own families or preventing them from herding in their 
families' enterprises unless better and equally profitable uses of 
their time are available.  This does not appear likely in the short 
term. 
 
------------- 
TASKING 2/TDA 
------------- 
 
PART 2A: PREVALENCE AND SECTORAL DISTRIBUTION 
OF EXPLOITIVE CHILD LABOR 
--------------------------------------------- 
 
9.  (U)  Sub-part 1.  There is evidence, some anecdotal, some easily 
observed, that children are involved in street vending and domestic 
service in private homes.  UNICEF and other NGOs confirm that an 
unknown number of under-age male children remain the national army 
of Chad and in rebel militias, although UNICEF obtained the release 
of 240 child soldiers in 2009 (and a total of 795 since 2007). 
There are suspicions and speculations that some children might be or 
 
NDJAMENA 00000084  004.3 OF 012 
 
 
have been involved in illicit activities such as prostitution, 
narcotics trafficking or production, or in other commercial sexual 
activities, but information about these forms of exploitation cannot 
be provided by the Ministries of Labor or Justice.  These matters 
(fundamentally shameful to most Chadians) are almost entirely under 
the purview of special units of the police or of the Ministry of 
Public Security.  UNICEF believes that at least one case of possible 
child prostitution in a Sudan refugee camp in Eastern Chad was being 
investigated by the Detachement integre de securite (DIS), the 
UN-trained force of Chadian police and gendarmes who have been 
charged with increasing security in refugee camps. 
 
10.  (U)  Sub-part 2.  Ministry of Labor officials who were 
interviewed extensively about data collection stated to emboffs that 
no data has been collected or exists on exploitive child labor 
during the reporting period or in past years, primarily because the 
Ministry has no trained statisticians or other personnel competent 
in such techniques.  As these officials described the work of the 
Ministry's 25 field inspectors and 59 assistant inspectors, a 
picture emerges of a small group of dedicated but only 
partly-trained "cops-on-the-beat,"  without powers of arrest, who 
patrol a large area of responsibility, hoping to deter bad labor 
practices of all kinds by their mere presence.  If situations 
written up by labor inspectors appear sufficiently grave to 
supervisors in the Labor Ministry, cases are referred to the 
Ministry of Justice (office of the Attorney General-equivalent) for 
possible prosecution before a judge.  Referral to Justice happens 
seldom.  There has been no collection of data about prosecutions or 
potential prosecutions. Labor Ministry officials stated that an 
annual meeting of representatives of four ministries (Labor, 
Justice, Social Action, and Planning) has taken place in the past 
several years, during which information about significant cases is 
shared in an effort toward collaboration.  No written minutes or 
records are kept.  The Labor Ministry has plans to train an 
additional 30 labor inspectors in 2010. 
 
PART 2B: LAWS AND REGULATIONS 
----------------------------- 
 
11.  (U)  Sub-part 1.  Labor Ministry officials interviewed by 
emboffs stated that no new laws or regulations were enacted in 
regard to exploitive child labor over the past year.  According to 
Ministry of Labor contacts, a draft Plan of Action against the worst 
forms of labor exploitation and trafficking in persons, originally 
designed to be put into place in 2008, has been pending since that 
time, with implementation delayed by the 2008 rebel attacks and 
consequent closure of the National Assembly until mid-2009.  The 
Plan of Action includes the goal of grouping all of Chad's existing 
laws protecting children -- which exist in various parts of the 
colonial-era Civil and Criminal Codes --  and supplementing them 
with additional laws to address the rights of children beyond the 
age of 11 (when compulsory schooling ends), and further adding in 
terms from the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, the UN 
Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, the Additional 
Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, and 
the Hague Convention on International Child Adoptions.  The ultimate 
goal is to publish an addendum to the Civil and Criminal Codes to be 
entitled the Chadian Code on Child Protection.  The Chadian National 
Assembly voted in July 2009 to authorize President Deby to ratify 
the UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime and the 
Additional Protocol on Trafficking (and he did so), but other new 
national legislation with respect to the eventual Code on Child 
Protection is still pending. 
 
12.  (U)  As noted in Ref B, in previous years, because of the 
 
NDJAMENA 00000084  005.2 OF 012 
 
 
difficulty of getting legislation through the National Assembly, 
plans were drawn up for an Executive Decree that would enable 
prosecution so that Chad would be better able to meet its 
commitments to international labor conventions aimed at protecting 
children.  The draft decree has now cleared the Secretary General of 
the Presidency and is on President Deby's desk.  It has been 
suggested that one reason for reluctance to sign the Decree is that 
the President or his advisers are uneasy about creating more 
internal responsibilities for a government that is already far 
overstretched.  Another reason is that the need for the Decree would 
be obviated if legislation with the same aims could be passed, now 
that the National Assembly is functioning again.  As reported last 
year, the Decree would harmonize Chadian labor regulations with ILO 
Articles 182 and 138, adding more infractions to Chad Labor Code 
Article 190. 
 
13.  (U)  Sub-part 2.   The core question set out in Sub-part 2 
contains two variable situations and implies a third.  a) The 
international standards in Ref A's paras 27 and 28 are partly 
applicable in Chad now, and will be considerably more so if the 
pending Decree described above is signed or laws passed.  b) Chad's 
legal and regulatory framework is probably not now adequate to 
address all forms of exploitive child labor, but will be 
strengthened if planned actions are taken.  Even without planned 
legal and/or legislative changes, Chad's existing framework would 
likely be adequate were there a robust, well-funded, and politically 
supported ministerial bureaucracy to execute it.  c) Some forms of 
exploitive child labor are currently being addressed (e.g. child 
soldiers), but others (e.g., child street vendors), are not. 
 
PART 2C: INSTITUTIONS AND 
MECHANISMS FOR ENFORCEMENT 
-------------------------- 
 
14.  (U)  Section I of 2C: Hazardous Child Labor 
 
-- Response 1:  According to Ministry of Labor officials, all 
discovery or investigation of hazardous child labor is the 
responsibility of the Ministry of Labor, with all efforts at 
prosecution and conviction the responsibility of the Ministry of 
Justice. 
 
-- Response 2:  As described by Ministry of Labor officials, in 
addition to the annual meeting of representatives of the four 
ministries described in Part 2A, sub-para 2 above, there are also 
clear procedures for both exchange of information between ministries 
and also enforcement responsibility.  Actual enforcement does not 
appear to occur often, at least not in the reporting period. 
 
-- Response 3:  Chad does not maintain a mechanism for facilitating 
complaints about hazardous child labor violations.  A high-ranking 
Ministry of Labor official stressed that complaints of this nature, 
either by victims, or by knowledgeable third parties, were not part 
of Chadian culture. 
 
-- Response 4:  Ministry officials told emboffs that some funding 
had been provided in the budget for transportation, office 
facilities, etc., but that the amount was inadequate, even for the 
six (of 18) districts of the country where labor inspectors are 
deloyed.  The senior Labor Ministry official disclosd that the 
amount in 2009 was about USD 5,000 pe single inspector pe 
district.  This amount, whle exclusive of the inspector's salary, 
was repeaedly described as inadequate to cover all expensesor to 
permit the inspector to perorm all his work. 
 
 
NDJAMENA 00000084  006.2 OF 012 
 
 
-- Response 5:  The Ministry of Labor employs 25 labor inspectors 
and 59 assistant inspectors.  In January 2010, 30 additional 
inspectors completed their training (as part of a process begun in 
2009).  They have not yet been deployed because of lack of funding. 
 
-- Response 6:  The Ministry of Labor could not supply a figure on 
how many inspections involving child labor had been carried out in 
2009.  Its officials said they were confident that all inspections 
were the result of random, government-initiated action.  They could 
not say in which sectors the inspections were done, and they 
estimated that the number of inspections was probably adequate for 
the districts where they took place. 
 
-- Response 7:   The Ministry of Labor could give no figures for how 
many children were removed or assisted as a result of inspections, 
and implied there were none.  The officials from the Ministry could 
not say whether the children involved were provided any social 
services or simply removed from their jobs.  As noted above, 
according to UNICEF the DIS was investigating a possible case of 
child prostitution in a Sudan refugee camp in the fall of 2009. 
 
-- Response 8:   Ministry officials told emboffs that no cases or 
"prosecutions" were opened in 2009. 
 
-- Response 9:   As with question 8 above, Labor Ministry 
representatives told emboffs that no child labor cases were closed 
or resolved in 2009. 
 
-- Response 10:  Ministry officials said they could not recall any 
instances where violations were found or "convictions" reached. 
 
-- Response 11:  Ministry officials said they estimated the average 
length of time to resolve a child labor case was about twelve 
months. 
 
-- Response 12:  The Ministry of Labor said it had no information to 
impart about penalties applied, fines paid, or jail sentences 
served, since those matters were the purview of the Ministry of 
Justice.  A Ministry of Justice official with whom emboffs spoke 
suggested that such actions were seldom taken by the Ministry. 
Chad's Criminal Code outlaws slavery, indentured servitude, bonded 
labor, labor by those under 14 (and under 16 for some "dangerous" 
profession including meat-packing), prostitution and sexual 
relations with children, among other labor-related statutes. 
 
-- Response 13:  The Ministry of Labor's Director General told 
emboffs that his responses to questions 7-10 above were insufficient 
to either prove or disprove the GoC's commitment to combat 
exploitive child labor.  He also offered that the collective actions 
of the GoC, including free primary education, a public campaign 
against child herding and a highly visible joint effort with UNICEF 
against child soldiers, indicated the GoC's commitment to end the 
worst aspects of child labor.  He argued that progress would largely 
depend on funding for increased bureaucracy.  Embassy points out 
that considerable public discussion is under way among elites on 
child exploitation, in part as a result of UNICEF's efforts to 
combat child soldiers.  GoC has invested to some extent in school 
buildings and related infrastructure, but has not performed well in 
training educators or supplying enough of them.  When children drop 
out of school, they become a ready source for those seeking to put 
them to work. 
 
-- Response 14:  The GoC did provide training for the 
inspectors/assistant inspectors within the Ministry of Labor, but 
these were general labor inspectors, not specialists in child labor, 
 
NDJAMENA 00000084  007.2 OF 012 
 
 
and some have not yet been put to work on the ministry's rolls. 
 
15.  (U)  Section II of 2C:  Forced Child Labor 
 
-- Response 1:  Ministry of Labor officials told emboffs that their 
Ministry was responsible for identifying or discovering cases of 
forced child labor, and that if a case appeared significant, it was 
turned over to the Ministry of Justice for prosecution. 
 
-- Response 2:  As the Ministry of Labor informed emboffs, a 
standard procedure exists for that Ministry to "work up" cases 
concerning forced child labor and then pass them to the Ministry of 
Justice for prosecution.   There is also the annual meeting of 
representatives of the Ministries of Planning, Labor, Justice, and 
Social Action, where information on forced child labor can be 
exchanged.  Since there is no record of any cases from either of 
these proceedings, we are not in a position to judge whether they 
can be considered effective. 
 
-- Response 3:   Chad does not maintain a mechanism for making 
complaints about forced labor violations.  Ministry of Labor 
officials explained it was not in the Chadian culture for forced 
labor victims, or third parties, to complain to the government. 
 
-- Response 4:   Labor Ministry officials told emboffs that some 
budget funding had been provided for inspections, but it was not 
adequate to cover all transportation, office needs, fuel, and other 
expenses of inspectors actually employed.  (NOTE:  At no time did 
Embassy's interlocutors indicate that any funding was provided 
specifically for use of inspectors in pursuit of forced labor cases. 
 All inspectors are generalists; none are dedicated to a particular 
type of exploitive child labor.  END NOTE.) 
 
-- Response 5:  The Ministry of Labor employs 25 labor inspectors 
and 59 assistant inspectors.  In January 2010, 30 additional 
inspectors completed their training (as part of a process begun in 
2009).  They have not yet been deployed because of lack of funding. 
 
-- Response 6:  The Ministry of Labor officials interviewed could 
not supply a figure on how many inspections involving child labor 
(and by extension, of forced child labor) had been carried out in 
2009.  The officials were confident that all inspections were the 
result of random, government-initiated actions.  They could not say 
in which sectors the inspections were done.  They estimated that the 
number of inspections was probably adequate for the locations where 
they took place. 
 
-- Response 7:  The Ministry of Labor could give no figures for how 
many children were removed or assisted as a result of inspections, 
and implied there were none.  The officials from the Ministry could 
not say whether the children involved were provided any social 
services or simply removed from their jobs.  As noted above, 
according to UNICEF the DIS was investigating a possible case of 
child prostitution in a Sudan refugee camp in the fall of 2009. 
 
-- Response 8:   Ministry officials told emboffs that no cases or 
"prosecutions" were opened in 2009. 
 
-- Response 9:   Ministry officials told emboffs that no child labor 
cases were closed or resolved in 2009. 
 
-- Response 10:  Ministry of Labor officials said they did not think 
any violations were found, or convictions reached in 2009, but that 
in any case the Ministry of Justice was the responsible body. 
 
 
NDJAMENA 00000084  008.2 OF 012 
 
 
-- Response 11:  Ministry officials said that they estimated the 
average length of time to resolve a child labor case was about 
twelve months. 
 
-- Response 12:   The Ministry of Labor said it had no information 
to impart about penalties applied, fines paid, or jail sentences 
served, since those matters were the purview of the Ministry of 
Justice.  A Ministry of Justice official with whom emboffs spoke 
suggested that such actions were seldom taken by the Ministry. 
Chad's Criminal Code outlaws slavery, indentured servitude, bonded 
labor, labor by those under 14 (and under 16 for some "dangerous" 
profession including meat-packing), prostitution and sexual 
relations with children, among other labor-related statutes. 
 
-- Response 13:  The Ministry of Labor's Director General told 
emboffs that his responses to questions 7-10 above were insufficient 
to either prove or disprove the GoC's commitment to combat 
exploitive child labor.  He also offered that the collective actions 
of the GoC, including free primary education, a public campaign 
against child herding and a highly visible joint effort with UNICEF 
against child soldiers, indicated the GoC's commitment to end the 
worst aspects of child labor.  He argued that progress would largely 
depend on funding for increased bureaucracy.  Embassy points out 
that considerable public discussion is under way among elites on 
child exploitation, in part as a result of UNICEF's efforts to 
combat child soldiers.  GoC has invested to some extent in school 
buildings and related infrastructure, but has not performed well in 
training educators or supplying enough of them.  When children drop 
out of school, they become a ready source for those seeking to put 
them to work. 
 
-- Response 14:  The GoC did provide training for 
inspectors/assistant inspectors within the Ministry of Labor, but 
these were general labor inspectors, not specialists in child labor, 
and some have not yet been put to work on the ministry's rolls. 
 
PART 2D:  INSTITUTIONS AND 
MECHANISMS FOR EFFECTIVE ENFORCEMENT 
------------------------------------ 
 
16.  (U)  Section I: Child Trafficking 
 
-- Response 1:   Embassy contacts at the Ministry of Labor told 
emboffs that their Ministry had no responsibility for monitoring or 
investigating cases of child trafficking or use of children in 
illicit activities, as these are considered criminal rather than 
civil violation.  Special units of the police and gendarmerie, and 
inspectors in the Chadian National Army (in the case of child 
soldiers) as well as the DIS, are given first responsibility for 
investigating trafficking, child prostitution, child soldiers and 
use of children in illicit activities. 
 
-- Response 2:  Post has been unable to uncover figures for the 
amount of funding devoted to investigating use of children in 
illicit activities, as some types of exploitation are treated simply 
as criminal actions and funding to combat them comes from regular 
budgets.  Regarding child soldiers, Chadian inspectors accompanied 
UNICEF and international representatives including emboffs to 
installations in Abeche, N'Djamena, Moussoro and Mongo in mid-2009 
to identify child soldiers captures from rebel units, discuss 
demobilization plans, and raise awareness regarding prohibitions 
against their use.  The government cooperated with international 
efforts to provide rehabilitation services. 
 
-- Response 3:  The GoC did not maintain a hotline for citizens to 
 
NDJAMENA 00000084  009.2 OF 012 
 
 
report abuses, but it did commence extensive investigations within 
the Chadian National Army to identify and demobilize child soldiers. 
 A total of 240 child soldiers were demobilized in 2009, and 795 
since 2007.  The GoC has encouraged citizens concerned about the 
possible recruitment of their children by rebel bands to coordinate 
with UNICEF to locate the children and obtain their release.  UNICEF 
has worked closely with the families of the child soldiers 
demobilized thus far -- to the extent that they can be identified -- 
and has coordinated with other international donors to place the 
children in job training or educational facilities upon their 
release. 
 
-- Response 4:  Because ongoing criminal cases may not be discussed 
even with UNICEF, it is not known how many investigations were 
opened, if any, in response to allegations of child trafficking in 
2009.  At least one allegation of child prostitution is being 
followed by the DIS in a refugee camp in Eastern Chad. 
 
-- Response 5:  Other than the 795 child soldiers demobilized since 
2007 (240 in the course of 2009) it is not known how many additional 
children have been rescued from exploitative situations.  Some 
elements in the Chadian elite, and some international NGOs, have 
attempted to raise awareness about the problem of children given to 
conservative religious schools and forced to beg by their teachers. 
It is not known how many children may find themselves in such 
situations, or whether any have been rescued. 
 
-- Response 6:  See above.  Ongoing legal cases are not matters for 
public information release. 
 
-- Response 7:  See above.  Ongoing legal cases are not matters for 
public information release. 
 
-- Response 8:  See above.  Ongoing legal cases are not matters for 
public information release. 
 
-- Response 9:  Chad's Criminal Code outlaws slavery, indentured 
servitude, bonded labor, labor by those under 14 (and under 16 for 
some "dangerous" profession including meat-packing), prostitution 
and sexual relations with children, among other labor- and 
trafficking-related statutes.  Penalties are not always stipulated. 
 
-- Response 10:  See above.  Ongoing legal cases are not matters for 
public information release. 
 
-- Response 11:  Cases can be resolved quickly -- as occurred with 
respect to child soldiers -- when evidence of wrongdoing is clear 
cut.  In cases where circumstances are unclear, investigations may 
take place over a protracted period.  Chad follows the French 
practice of making arrests only when substantial evidence of 
potential guilt has been amassed. 
 
-- Response 12:  Some members of the Chadian National Army have been 
trained to identify child soldiers, and some Ministry of Labor 
Ministry of Human Rights inspectors have worked with military 
counterparts to identify child soldiers in rebel ranks. 
 
-- Response 13:  Commanders in the Chadian National Army found to 
have employed child soldiers have been censured and warned to cease 
such recruitments if they wish to retain their ranks and avoid 
prosecution.  Surrendering commanders of rebel units who have 
employed child soldiers may face prosecution for various crimes, 
although Chad is inclined to extend amnesty to those who wish to 
return to the fold as part of its longstanding national 
reconciliation program.  UNICEF has declared Chad's attempts to 
 
NDJAMENA 00000084  010.2 OF 012 
 
 
address the problem of child soldiers "convincing" and demonstrative 
of a "sense of purpose" in the course of 2009. 
 
PART 2E:  GOVERNMENT POLICIES ON CHILD LABOR 
-------------------------------------------- 
 
17.  (U)  Responses to individual questions in this section follow: 
-- Response 1:  The most dramatic and high-profile evidence of GoC 
desire to address exploitive child labor came at the end of the 
reporting period (2009), when President Deby spoke at some length in 
his New Year's address to the Chadian people about the need to 
combat the worst forms of child labor.  The GOC's public campaigns 
to raise awareness about the dangers of renting/selling children as 
herders, and more dramatically, about child soldiers (in conjunction 
with UNICEF) also attest to awareness the problems exist. 
 
-- Response 2:  The best example of an effort by Chad to incorporate 
exploitive child labor specifically as an issue to be addressed in 
poverty reduction, as well as well as general development and 
enhanced educational opportunities, can be found in the draft 
2008-2010 Plan of Action against the worst forms of exploitation and 
trafficking, described in para 11 above.  The Action Plan contains 
strategies to educate the population about exploitive child labor; 
to emphasize the need for children to remain in school; and to raise 
awareness about the advisability of helping the socially vulnerable. 
 Unfortunately, the Plan was not launched as intended due to rebel 
activity in the capital in 2008.  Our Ministry of Labor contacts 
remain frustrated that it has still not been launched to date. 
 
-- Responses 3 and 4:  See response 2 immediately above. 
 
-- Response 5:  The GoC has worked with UNICEF, CARE, other NGOs, 
and international partners to provide schooling and job training for 
demobilized child soldiers.  UNICEF describes the programs as highly 
effective. 
 
-- Response 6:  In conjunction with UNICEF, the GoC hosted 
internationally-attended inspections of its own armed forces and of 
captured rebel units to demonstrate that children had been 
demobilized.  We are unaware of commissions or task forces that may 
have been set up regarding exploitative child labor, although 
interministerial meetings do occur. 
 
-- Response 7:  In the course of 2009, the GoC ratified and signed 
the UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, and the 
Additional Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in 
Persons.  The Hague Convention on International Child Adoptions is 
pending before the National Assembly, along with other national 
legislation related to child protection. 
 
PART 2F:  SOCIAL PROGRAMS TO ELIMINATE 
OR PREVENT CHILD LABOR 
-------------------------------------- 
 
18.  (U)  Responses to individual questions in this section follow. 
 
-- Response 1:  The GoC's program undertaken in 2009, in conjunction 
with UNICEF, to eliminate child soldiers, constitutes an effort that 
is sincere and at promising, in UNICEF's view.  See para 16 above. 
 
-- Response 2:  Chadian officials are aware that child labor, 
particularly for those between the ages of 11 (when compulsory 
primary school ends) and 14 (when some types of work are permitted), 
will be difficult to eliminate unless more schools are built and 
teachers trained.  In connection with poverty reduction programs 
 
NDJAMENA 00000084  011.2 OF 012 
 
 
designed and sponsored by the IMF and World Bank, and with public 
revenue management programs also put into place by the IFIs, Chad is 
formally committed to spending on education and not diverting 
resources to other budgetary activities.  Still, its ability to 
honor commitments is weak, and cronyism is a problem in connection 
with all public spending.  (See Ref C for details.) 
 
-- Response 3:  The IMF has described Chad's 2009 and 2010 final 
budgets as "not bad overall," but it remains concerned that money 
will be diverted from necessary poverty reduction programs that will 
improve the GoC's ability to combat exploitative child labor and 
devoted to military or infrastructure spending. 
 
-- Response 4:  Government efforts to expose and thus reduce the use 
of child soldiers are described in para 16 above. 
 
-- Response 5:  The GoC has worked with UNICEF, CARE, other NGOs, 
and international partners to provide schooling and job training for 
demobilized child soldiers.  UNICEF describes the programs as highly 
effective. 
 
-- Response 6:  In the course of 2009, the GoC ratified and signed 
the UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, and the 
Additional Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in 
Persons.  The Hague Convention on International Child Adoptions is 
pending before the National Assembly, along with other national 
legislation related to child protection.  The GoC has long hoped to 
group its existing laws related to child protection together with 
these international codes, and to add in additional pending national 
laws or decrees designed to address gaps in existing laws, and to 
publish a special Code on Child Protection.  This project has not 
yet come to fruition, but public awareness of the dangers of child 
exploitation has grown in response to increasing government and 
internatiD5&FuQb[BO/ce to the first question above, this 
Embassy's estimate is that Chad is probably among the less tarnished 
of nations in its region.  There are reports of almost every sort of 
corruption and exploitation here, but very few, if any Chadians, see 
exploitation of children as a raging problem for their nation.  Chad 
has categories of children who are exploited:  child soldiers, child 
herders, children forced to beg by religious masters, urban child 
beggars, occasional child prostitutes, and children who work with 
their families' herds or in their fields when they finish school 
without otherwise being abused.  This is to some degree directly 
attributable to the fact that Chad remains a poor, largely rural, 
and illiterate society.  Our belief is that people are slowly 
awakening to the shame and disadvantage of exploitation of children. 
 
 
21.  (SBU)  The GoC took a few steps in the right direction in 2009, 
first among these growing recognition among the leadership that 
child soldiers are unnecessary and undesirable and that it makes 
good sense to collaborate with UNICEF and other international 
partners to reduce their number.  The child soldier problem is a 
 
NDJAMENA 00000084  012.2 OF 012 
 
 
diminishing one, although some victims remain.  Unfortunately, there 
was no complementary improvement in the educational sector in 2009. 
Were more schooling available, particularly for those between 11 and 
14, fewer youth and their families would see the labor market as 
tempting.   The GoC deserves straight talk on the topic of public 
revenue management to ensure that it continues to spend for 
education; it is getting this sort of talk from the IMF, World Bank 
and international partners. 
 
22.  (SBU)  If Chad's progress is to be judged on whether there is 
an increase in investigations, inspections, prosecutions, 
convictions, etc., then it arguably fails.  The number of 
investigations and inspections with respect to child soldiers went 
up considerably last year, but other inspections have likely taken 
place at the same rate as previously.  This is as much a problem of 
Chad's weak criminal justice system as it is lack of interest in 
deterring or punishing those who attempt to exploit children.  Chad 
will never adjudicate its way out of current problems.  Government 
publicity campaigns, such as those that have focused on child 
soldiers and herders, have had some effect on public awareness.  To 
sum up our judgment, Chad is not back-sliding, it is just climbing 
very slowly.