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Viewing cable 10NIAMEY206, NIGER INFORMATION ON CHILD LABOR AND FORCED LABOR

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
10NIAMEY206 2010-02-25 08:10 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Niamey
VZCZCXYZ0000
RR RUEHWEB

DE RUEHNM #0206/01 0560811
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 250810Z FEB 10
FM AMEMBASSY NIAMEY
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 0041
INFO RUEHNM/AMEMBASSY NIAMEY
UNCLAS NIAMEY 000206 
 
SIPDIS 
STATE: DLR/ILCSR FOR SARAH MORGAN 
G/TIP FOR LUIS CDEBACA 
AF/RSA, AND AF/W 
DOL: DOL/ILAB FOR LEYLA STROTKAMP, RACHEL RIGBY, TINA MCCARTER 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: ELAB EIND ETRD KTIP PHUM SOCI NG
SUBJECT: NIGER INFORMATION ON CHILD LABOR AND FORCED LABOR 
 
REF: 09 STATE 131997; 09 NIAMEY 0092 
 
1. Post's response corresponds to checklist in para 15, sections 1A 
through 1F, and para 21, sections 2A through 2G of ref A. 
 
 
 
1A)- 1F) PRODUCTION OF GOODS 
 
 
 
Post has no information indicating significant forced labor or 
exploitative child labor in the production of goods in Niger. 
Children work in the agricultural, commercial, mining, and 
artisanal sectors, but the quantity of goods produced is not 
substantial enough to warrant inclusion in this report.  Uranium is 
the country's most important export, and there are no reports of 
relevant abuses in this sector.  Please also refer to Ref B. 
 
 
 
2. 
 
 
 
A. PREVALENCE AND SECTORAL DISTRIBUTION OF EXPLOITIVE CHILD LABOR. 
 
 
 
In 2007, a collaborative study by the Ministry of Civil Service and 
Labor, the National Statistics Institute (INS), and the 
International Labor Organization (ILO) showed that 27 percent out 
of a sample of 600 children work in the rural sector (agriculture, 
livestock raising, and fishing), 20 percent work in the artisanal 
mining sector (mainly gold mines), 34 percent work in the 
manufacturing and maintenance sector (mechanic, welding, metal 
work, handicrafts, tannery, and slaughterhouses), and 18 percent 
work in the service sector (peddling, small trade, domestic work, 
and begging).  The majority of child workers surveyed (73 percent) 
were children under 15 years old employed in the informal sector, 
and 77 percent of the child workers were from families living in 
precarious conditions. 
 
 
 
A survey carried out by the National Commission on Human rights and 
Fundamental Liberties (CNDHLF) in 2008 found that children were 
employed in the following sectors:  peddling (33 percent); domestic 
work (17 percent); mechanic help (11 percent); and welding, 
carpentry, package handling, and traditional gold mining (22 
percent).  The survey reports that the work performed by children 
is proposed by a family member (49 percent), or is undertaken on 
the child's own initiative (40 percent).  The purpose of working is 
to help their family (46 percent) or while awaiting a better paying 
job (18 percent).  The survey reports that 78 percent of the 
children are paid for the work they perform.  Children work during 
the day (78 percent) but also in the evening (26 percent), 
sometimes for ten hours (15 percent) or 12 hours (10 percent) per 
day.  Twenty-nine percent of the child workers reported that they 
have been mistreated, e.g., insults (19 percent), physical violence 
(9 percent), salary cuts (3 percent), and are not able to lodge 
complaints (46 percent). 
 
 
 
The 19 child protection NGOs and associations representatives 
interviewed by the CNDHLF survey reported that child labor occurs 
essentially in the agricultural sector (32 percent)and domestic 
work (26 percent), but the worst forms relate to sexual 
exploitation (21 percent of responses). 
 
 
 
During a June 25 fact-finding visit to three traditional gold 
mining sites in Tillabery region, Embassy officials were told by 
ILO representatives that at least 10,000 children worked in the 
mines.  The government also provided sensitization and training 
sessions on the fight against child labor in artisanal gold mining 
to technical partners, local officials, and community leaders. 
 
 
 
According to the Ministry of Civil Service and Labor, 150 children 
including 90 girls were rescued from exploitation in streets, 
slaughterhouses, and sexual exploitation, and reinserted in the 
 
socio-professional life during the year.  In addition, 115 children 
including 46 girls were rescued from exploitation in traditional 
gold mines at M'Banga and Komabangou, and reinserted in 
socio-professional life. 
 
 
 
B. LAWS AND REGULATIONS. 
 
 
 
The Ministry of Civil Service and Labor adopted a list of 
occupations considered to be the worst forms of child labor (WFCL) 
as called for in Article 4 of ILO Convention 182.  The list is part 
of the Labor Code review package expected to be approved by the 
Council of Ministers and promulgated as a decree.  In November 
2009, the Ministry of Civil Service and Labor validated a National 
Action Plan on the fight against child trafficking for the period 
of 2010-2015.  The country's legal corpus is adequate overall for 
addressing exploitative child labor.  Although the fines provided 
by the Labor Code, last updated in 1996, are probably still 
adequate to punish and deter violations, the vigor with which they 
are applied may not be. 
 
 
 
C. INSTITUTIONS AND MECHANISMS FOR ENFORCEMENT - hazardous child 
labor and forced child labor 
 
 
 
2C, Section I: Hazardous child labor 
 
 
 
The Ministry of Civil Service and Labor is the agency responsible 
for implementation and enforcement of child labor laws.  The 
Ministry for the Promotion of Women and Protection of Children 
coordinates the Government of Niger's (GON) overall child 
protection policy.  Coordination between the two ministries is 
poor.  In addition, each of the ten district courts and the 36 
magistrates' courts has at least one special judge assigned to 
address children's issues, including child labor.  All judicial 
police sections at the regional and district levels may take up 
cases involving juveniles and refer them to the judge. 
 
 
 
The Ministry of Civil Service and Labor has approximately 100 
inspectors deployed nationwide who are responsible for 
investigating cases of child labor as well as enforcing all other 
elements of the Labor Code.  This number is way below the 
ministry's needs, but the government has increased its allocations 
to the nine regional labor inspectorates over the past few years. 
For example, the government allocation of 25,182,000 CFA (over USD 
51,000) for labor inspections in 2007 was eight times the amount 
that had been allocated in 2005. Niger is a huge country and the 
majority of the population is rural; the Ministry of Civil Service 
and Labor noted that the allocation is insufficient to provide 
resources, including transportation and fuel, necessary for 
effective inspections. 
 
 
 
While the Ministry of Civil Service and Labor claims that it 
carries out routine inspections, the ministry is unable to provide 
any data regarding the number of complaints, investigations, and 
prosecutions related to the worst forms of child labor.  The 
Ministry argues that in fact most child labor takes place in the 
informal sector of the economy, which is typically beyond the 
purview of the authorities.  The Ministry of Labor reports that 
during the past year the national chapter of the International 
Programme on the Elimination of Child Labor(ILO/IPEC) rescued 69 
boys and 46 girls from exploitation in mines, and enrolled them in 
activities such as sewing, carpentry (for boys) and restaurant and 
beauty salon services (for girls). 
 
 
 
No child labor cases or "prosecutions" were opened during the year. 
When they occur, child labor cases may take several months to 
resolve.  However, the Ministry of Civil Service and Labor reported 
that law enforcement authorities recently prosecuted 11 cases of 
abduction of minors, three of which which resulted in  convictions. 
The Ministry was not able to provide information about the 
penalties that were applied. 
 
The Government of Niger is taking steps to combat exploitative 
child labor through improved legislation and child labor issues 
feature prominently in the government's multi-faceted public 
education campaign on children's rights.  The government continues 
to organize workshops and other public 
 
awareness sessions in order to train and sensitize law enforcement 
officers, journalists, religious leaders, traditional chiefs, and 
other community leaders on the need to protect children and to 
develop legislation that specifically addresses child exploitation. 
This continuous training allowed labor inspectors to develop the 
"reflex" to ask certain basic questions during their investigation 
and monitoring visits. 
 
 
 
2C, Section II: Forced Child Labor 
 
 
 
Issues related to forced child labor are addressed by the same 
agencies and enforcement processes of the Ministry of Civil Service 
and Labor as outlined above. 
 
 
 
In accordance with traditional practice, some Nigerien parents give 
their children to religious teachers, or marabouts, for a sort of 
apprenticeship in which the marabout teaches the child the Koran 
and prepares him for a career as a religious scholar and teacher. 
Some marabouts require their wards to beg in the streets or to work 
to earn the cost of their education, room, and board.  In a 2005 
USG-sponsored study, 93 out of 123 marabouts interviewed (75.6 
percent) responded that they required their students to work for 
them. 
 
 
 
D) INSTITUTIONAL MECHANISMS FOR EFFECTIVE ENFORCEMENT - child 
trafficking, commercial sexual exploitation of children (CSEC), use 
of children in illicit activities. 
 
 
 
2D, Section I: Child Trafficking 
 
 
 
Niger does not have any specialized government agencies or 
personnel for the enforcement of child trafficking.  However, a 
number of different government agencies are involved in 
anti-trafficking efforts, including the Ministries of Interior and 
of Justice.  The Ministry of Justice is the lead agency on 
trafficking.  In addition, each of the ten district courts and the 
36 magistrates' courts has at least one special judge who addresses 
children's issues.  All judicial police sections at the regional 
and district levels may handle cases involving juveniles and refer 
them to the judge. 
 
 
 
Given the GON's limited capacities, agencies did not have adequate 
resources to conduct their activities.  Niger does not have a 
special hotline, but cases of child trafficking can be reported to 
the judicial police, government social workers, or non-governmental 
organizations (NGOs).  In order to implement ILO Convention 182 and 
the various bilateral and multilateral agreements against child 
trafficking, the government established 30 watchdog teams or 
"vigilance committees" and set up several joint brigades along the 
borders.  During the reporting period, NGOs rescued 219 child 
trafficking victims. 
 
 
 
It takes several months to resolve cases of child trafficking, and 
prosecution is difficult in the absence of a specific law 
criminalizing trafficking.  According to the Ministry of Civil 
Service and Labor, in some cases charges were dropped due to "lack 
of legal evidence" and marabouts arrested for exploiting  children 
for economic purposes were released after their pretrial custody. 
 
2D, Section II: Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children 
 
 
 
The same agencies described in 2D, Section I above are responsible 
for the enforcement of laws relating to commercial sexual 
exploitation of children.  The Penal Code criminalizes the 
procurement of a minor for the purpose of prostitution.  The same 
processes described above apply to sexual exploitation of children. 
 
 
 
The Ministry of Civil Service and Labor reported that vigilance 
committees rescued 150 children from exploitation including 90 
girls from sexual exploitation.  However, there were no arrests or 
prosecutions. 
 
On July 8, 2009 upon a complaint lodged by Ecole Parrainage Action 
de Development (EPAD).  Niger, the Tribunal of Madaoua, Tahoua 
Region, arrested two suspected traffickers who used six girls and 
two boys in a prostitution ring in Nigeria.  The suspects were 
released after serving a sentence of two months in jail.  EPAD 
enrolled the victims in a counseling and reinsertion program.  One 
of the girls received support to open a telephone service center; 
two girls received sewing machines and operated their own business; 
one of the boys went back to school and the second now sells 
telephone charge cards.  Three girls continue to be enrolled in a 
vocational training program. 
 
On July 9, 2009, upon EPAD Niger's report, police arrested nine 
people on charges of sexual exploitation of two girls.  The 
suspected criminals were released three weeks later. 
 
2D, Section III: Use of Children in Illicit Activities 
 
The same agencies described in 2D, Sections I and II above are 
responsible for the enforcement of laws relating to Use of Children 
in Illicit Activities.  Provisions of the penal code and the same 
processes described above apply to sexual exploitation of children. 
 
 
 
E) GOVERNMENT POLICIES ON CHILD LABOR 
 
 
 
The government has developed and adopted a National Plan for the 
Fight against the Sexual Exploitation of Children. 
 
In November 2009, the government developed and validated a 
National Action Plan against the Worst Forms of Child Labor in 
Niger.  The government indicated that the plan is funded by the 
national budget with support from donors (ILO/IPEC, UNICEF), but 
was not able to provide the amount of funding. 
 
 
 
Child labor is specifically incorporated in Niger's 2008-2012 
Accelerated Development and Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper. 
 
 
 
The Ministry of Civil Service and Labor provided capacity building 
training for 220 people including 35 percent of women representing 
implementing and partner agencies in design, monitoring, and 
implementation of action plans on the fight against child labor. 
 
 
 
During the first quarter of 2010, the Ministry of Civil Service and 
Labor, in conjunction with the National Statistics Institute (INS) 
and the ILO, will release the final results of a national survey on 
child labor.  The survey was designed to generate data on 
children's educational, economic, and non-economic activities and 
to create a qualitative and quantitative database of child labor in 
Niger. 
 
 
 
The National Statistics Institute is conducting a baseline study on 
child labor in mines. 
 
 
 
The GON collaborates with donor efforts to withdraw children from 
 
the labor force and reinsert them into schools and vocational 
training programs.  The ILO assisted the GON's efforts to create a 
special child-labor division within the Ministry of Civil Service 
and Labor.  This office was established in September 2005 and is 
charged with the coordination of the government's efforts to end 
the worst forms of child labor.  The office is also charged with 
conducting studies on the scope and nature of the problem. 
 
 
 
The GON has created a multi-ministerial Commission for the 
Coordination of the Fight Against Trafficking in Persons, to serve 
as the nodal agency for work on trafficking in persons. In 2006, 
the GON created a National Commission Against Forced Labor and 
Discrimination including representatives of the Minister of Labor, 
the ILO, the civil society, labor unions and traditional chiefs. 
 
 
 
Niger ratified the Additional Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and 
 
Punish Trafficking in Persons, especially Women and Children, 
 
supplementing the UN convention Against Transnational Organized 
 
Crime.  Niger ratified the Optional Protocol to the Convention on 
the Rights of the Child on the Sale of Children, Child 
Prostitution, and Child Pornography.  The GON has enacted the July 
2005 Multilateral Agreement to Combat Child Trafficking in West 
Africa.  In December 2006, Nigeria and Niger prepared a bilateral 
memorandum of agreement on cooperation to prevent, suppress and 
 
punish trafficking in persons especially women and children.  The 
agreement has not been signed at the end of the reporting period. 
 
 
 
F) SOCIAL PROGRAMS TO ELIMINATE OR PREVENT CHILD LABOR 
 
 
 
The government carried out several actions in order to prevent 
children's engagement in the Worst Forms of Child Labor: 
 
 
 
* improved school attendance, especially in mining zones; 
 
 
 
* creation of improved koranic schools in all regions; 
 
 
 
* vocational training for children working in mines and those who 
dropped out of school; and 
 
 
 
* government-supported welcome and reinsertion centers for victims 
of the worst forms of child labor, which have rescued 196 girls 
from domestic labor and reinserted them in acceptable occupations. 
 
 
 
Under the ILO/IPEC project, the Ministry of Civil Service and Labor 
supported the following actions: 
 
 
 
* sessions to inform, sensitize, and train technical partners, 
local officials, and community leaders on the fight against child 
labor in mines; 
 
 
 
* school enrollment for 922 children including 440 girls at 
Komabangou II gold mining site and surrounding villages in order to 
prevent the WFCL; 
 
 
 
* school enrollment for 1,273 children including 593 girls at 
M'Banga  mining site and surounding villages; 
 
* teacher recruitment for primary schools in M'Banga, Komabangou, 
and 16 surrounding villages; 
 
 
 
* program intended for 206 children including 46 girls for the 
development in Komabangou of an entertainment hall, a soccer and 
volleyball field, the provision of sports equipment, and support 
for the training of sports, arts, and leisure clubs; 
 
 
 
* literacy training and skill building for 100 parents of children 
working in mines; 
 
 
 
* capacity building for 214 community leaders and members of the 
Association of Niger's Gold Traditional Gold Diggers and other 
associations on the functioning of organizations and on 
non-violence and conflict management; 
 
* community mobilization for the construction of 19 adobe 
classrooms; and 
 
* installation of a Local Child Labor Observation and Monitoring 
Committee (CLOSTE) at Komabangou and M'Banga. 
 
The GON supported and cooperated with US DOL's three-year 
 
(2006-2009), USD 3 million program on the prevention and 
elimination of child labor in mining in West Africa, implemented 
through a partnership with the ILO's International Programme on the 
Elimination of Child Labor(IPEC).  The program had funded public 
education/sensitization projects at two gold mining sites in Niger 
at Komabangou and M'Banga. 
 
 
 
Two projects have been implemented at the Komabangou site.  The 
goal of the first project, implemented by a local NGO, AFETEN 
(Action en Faveur de l'Elimination du Travail des Enfants au 
Niger), was to combat child labor by helping 100 women miners 
achieve literacy and by providing vocational training to 100 girls 
between the ages of 14 and 17.  The project also provided 
microcredit financing so that they could become better integrated 
into the non-mining economy. 
 
 
 
The goal of the second USDOL/ILO/IPEC project, implemented by the 
local NGO Action-Education, was to reduce child labor through 
providing sensitization, sports, and civic education for 1,118 
children aged 7 to 17.  The two projects were completed in July 
2009. 
 
 
 
Two vocational training programs for children were the focus of 
 
activities at the M'Banga site.  A project implemented by local NGO 
ALTEN (Association pour la Lutte contre le Travail des Enfants au 
Niger)was designed to rescue 680 child miners and to support 100 of 
their family members.  The second project, implemented by EPAD 
(Ecole-Parrainage et Action de Developpement), involved community 
organization and socio-professional insertion of 100 child workers. 
Both projects were completed in July 2009. 
 
 
 
Public awareness remains a critical element in efforts to improve 
legal protections and enforcement.  The GON continues a public 
education campaign on children's rights in collaboration with 
UNICEF and the ILO.  Since 2001, the GON and the ILO have 
collaborated on a number of programs designed to improve law 
enforcement and sensitize civil servants, parents, traditional 
chiefs, and other key actors on the issue of child labor.  For 
example, on the occasion of the International Day of the Fight 
against Child Labor (June 12), the International Labor 
Organization's International Program for the Elimination of Child 
Labor (ILO/IPEC) and the Ministry of Civil Service and Labor 
organized public events and a conference to raise public awareness 
of the issues Niger faces in combating the worst forms of child 
labor and child trafficking.  The events received wide media 
coverage. 
 
On June 16, 2009, Niger's First Lady and the Minister of Women's 
Promotion and Children's Protection chaired a town hall meeting to 
sensitize the public on the occasion of the African Children's Day. 
Several cabinet members, diplomats, international organization 
representatives, NGOs, and the public attended the event.  The 
Minister of Women's Promotion and Children's Protection stressed 
the GON's commitment to implement the relevant ILO conventions 
ratified by Niger, notably ILO Convention 182, in order to improve 
the situation of Niger's children.  The Minister called on the 
population to "massively" participate in all of the child 
protection sensitization sessions and urged the media to provide 
extensive coverage of the activities.  During the event, the 
Coalition of NGOs and Associations supporting Childhood in Niger 
(CONAFE-Niger) announced that it welcomed "encouraging progress" in 
child protection, but added that it "deplores the National 
Committee on Child Survival's lethargy and the lack of resources to 
facilitate its work...CONAFE-Niger is deeply concerned by the 
non-adoption of the Children's Code and the anti-trafficking law, 
and the inexistence of several legal provisions." 
 
 
 
On July 28, 2009, the Nigerien Association for the Fight against 
Delinquency (ANTD), a local NGO working on child labor and 
trafficking, and the Open Society Initiative for West Africa 
(OSIWA), organized a three-day workshop to sensitize marabouts 
(religious teachers) on the promotion of children's rights and the 
fight against children's forced and illegal migration.  The United 
States Ambassador opened the workshop, and reiterated USG and her 
strong personal support for efforts to combat child labor and 
trafficking. 
 
 
The GON carried out and/or supported, with measured improvement, 
the above activities in line with the implementation of ILO 
conventions and the various bilateral and multilateral agreements 
on the fight against child trafficking. 
 
 
 
G) CONTINUAL PROGRESS 
 
 
 
The GON acknowledges the existence of child labor, considers it a 
problem, and is taking steps, consistent with its means, to combat 
the worst forms of child labor.  The GON has taken various measures 
to protect children through legislation, and continues its 
multi-faceted public education campaign on children's rights, 
forced labor issues, efforts to improve girls' education, the 
dangers of child marriage, improvements in birth registration, and 
the withdrawal since 2002 of over 7,000 children from the labor 
force and their reinsertion into schools and vocational training 
programs. 
 
 
 
The USDOL/ILO/IPEC projects have contributed to reducing child 
labor in especially dangerous environments.  Acting through the 
Ministry of Civil Service and Labor, the Ministry of Basic 
Education, and the Ministry of Territorial Management and Community 
Development, the GON has played a key role in the success of the 
USDOL/ILO/IPEC programs, and has added its own financial and human 
resources to the projects to ensure their success.  Over 7,000 
children have been removed from dangerous work environments since 
2002 and many thousands more who were at risk of entering the 
workforce have been sensitized to its dangers and received support 
that enabled them to remain in school. 
 
 
 
Notwithstanding the rescue and reintegration of hundreds of 
 
victims, child labor continues, especially in artisanal gold 
mining, in domestic work, and by children indentured to marabouts. 
 
 
 
Despite its limited resources and the complex political 
developments it has been going through over the past 13 months, 
Niger is making continual progress toward eliminating the worst 
 
forms of child labor.  Given its limited capacities, the GON works 
best when international organization or NGO partners assist it with 
 
resources and tactics.  Considering the actions described above 
taken by the Ministry of Civil Service and Labor, ILO/IPEC, and 
NGOs this year, there has been an increase overall in addressing 
child labor issues.  Lack of accurate data and coordination among 
government offices makes it difficult to determine the full scope 
of Niger's problem.  Child labor is widespread, but much of this 
labor does not meet the legal standard for worst forms of child 
labor. 
 
 
 
It is expected that the results of the INS and ILO survey due 
during the first quarter of 2010 are will provide valuable data and 
other information on the situation of child labor in Niger. 
WHITAKER