The Korea Herald

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[Tomoko Nishimoto] Modern slavery and child labor: Asia’s unacceptable record

By Korea Herald

Published : Nov. 16, 2017 - 17:47

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Sixty-two percent of the victims of modern slavery and 40 percent of the child laborers around the world are in Asia and the Pacific. Unacceptable forms of work call for unprecedented measures to combat them, says Tomoko Nishimoto, ILO assistant director-general, as governments, employers’ and workers’ representatives from 193 countries discuss ways to accelerate the eradication of child labor worldwide at the IV Global Conference on the Sustained Eradication of Child Labor.

Out of the 40 million victims of modern slavery worldwide, almost two-thirds -- 25 million people -- are exploited in Asia and the Pacific. Making the region host to the largest number of victims of modern slavery today.

Further breakdowns of the modern slavery figure reveal that the region accounts for 73 percent of all victims of forced sexual exploitation, 68 percent of those subjected to state-imposed forced labor and 64 percent of those in forced labor exploitation.

And although the share of persons living in extreme poverty in Asia and the Pacific has been cut by about 70 percent over the past 10 years, 62 million children still must work so they and their families can survive.

Fighting these unacceptable forms of work is part of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, adopted by world leaders in 2015. An agenda whereby all countries committed to achieving 17 interrelated goals and 169 associated targets to guide global development, which are collectively known as the Sustainable Development Goals.

Target 8.7 calls for “immediate and effective measures to eradicate forced labor, end modern slavery and human trafficking and secure the prohibition and elimination of the worst forms of child labor.”

The latest figures show that the Sustainable Development Goals, particularly Goal Target 8.7, will not be achieved unless efforts are dramatically increased. Ending modern slavery and child labor requires integrated thinking, coordinated action, effective policymaking and efficient use of resources in unprecedented ways.

Policies beyond the world of work must converge around this goal, to address the root causes of forced labor, modern slavery and child labor, and find the right incentives and deterrents to change behaviors.

A coherent strategy will include policies that touch upon fundamental rights of workers, education, social protection, labor inspection, informality, youth employment, gender, migration and labor law, while also strengthening our knowledge base through statistics and research.

Achieving SDG 8.7 will require mobilizing partnerships at a new level. Partnerships that harness energy, resources and strategic vision. And that’s what Alliance 8.7 is about: a multi-stakeholder initiative, conducting research and sharing knowledge, driving innovation, and leveraging resources to accelerate efforts to achieve the target.

This objective requires the active involvement of all parts of society, of all of us: Governments, workers’ and employers’ organizations, private sector, civil society and community organizations, faith-based groups, academia, media and individuals.

There are already some encouraging signs, especially in Asia which has seen the largest decline in child labor since 2012. This progress was accomplished by moving away from isolated approaches, towards policies that tackle the root causes of child labor, while strengthening countries’ legal frameworks and capacities for enforcement.

Let’s continue the momentum and ask ourselves and each other -- what more is needed to ensure there’s no one left behind in our own countries and communities, in our businesses, schools, and homes?

If not us, who else?


By Tomoko Nishimoto

Tomoko Nishimoto is ILO Assistant Director-General and Regional Director for Asia and the Pacific. -- Ed.