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Regional News
Poverty robbing Yemeni kids of their young years


Published Date: August 12, 2010 

SANAA: After their father died two years ago, Raseel and Anwar left their 
family to work in a car garage, joining the millions of Yemeni children forced 
into the impoverished country's labour market. Eleven-year-old Raseel 
Al-Khameri and his eight-year-old mute brother Anwar spend their days working 
in the garage in Sanaa in an attempt to sustain a needy family in the village 
of Al-Akhmoor, 300 km south of the capital. "I work day and night. You'll find 
me here (in the workshop) anytime from 9:00 am until 4:00 am," Raseel says 
shyly, as his small hands skillfully work with various car parts.

With an innocent smile never leaving his face, little Anwar closely follows his 
older brother's moves as he also tries to master the job. A study carried out 
in 2010 by the US-based aid group CHF International revealed that out of 
Yemen's 11 million children, five million are currently employed. Three-fifths 
of those do not receive an education while the remaining two million both study 
and work at the same time. CHF said that 40 percent of Yemeni children are 
drawn into the labour market between the ages
of seven and 13.

According to the study, 10 percent of the country's children start working when 
they are nine years old. By the age of 12, the number doubles to 20 percent and 
reaches 40 percent as they reach 13. CHF said that 80 percent of those children 
are involved in hazardous and arduous jobs, while over 60 percent use dangerous 
tools and over 30 percent said that they were injured or have fallen ill due to 
their jobs. Twenty percent of Yemen's working children were physically and 
emotionally abused, while 10 percent
were sexually abused, the study found. And some parents try to have their 
children smuggled into neighbouring Saudi Arabia, where they can earn 1500 
Saudi riyals (about $400) a month - a large amount compared to salaries in 
Yemen, according to the study.

Yemeni rights group SEYAJ says hundreds of children in the provinces of Hajja 
and Al-Hudaydah, in northwest Yemen, were involved in drug trafficking into 
neighbouring countries. "There are more than 200 children used in drug 
trafficking into Saudi Arabia... in return for small amounts of money given to 
those children," Ahmed al-Qurashi, head of SEYAJ, told AFP. The Sanaa 
government is aware of the problem of child labour. Adel Al-Sharaabi, director 
of social defence at the ministry of social affairs and labour, said "the 
reason behind child labour is the increase in poverty in the country". "The 
only solution to this problem is to improve Yemen's economy," he added.

But with the impoverished country facing a range of severe economic challenges, 
and struggling to maintain security and political stability as it cracks down 
on extremist networks, the plight of Yemen's children does not appear to be a 
high government priority. A study carried out by the social affairs ministry's 
child labour unit in June said that "192,000 children are currently working in 
the farming sector," and that due to the continuous use of pesticides, these 
children are prone to developing skin rashes, blindness, asthma and bronchitis.

Nearly half of the children working in agriculture suffer from skin infections, 
while 30 percent complain of mild purulent inflammations and 20 percent face 
intestinal infections, the government study said. Fifty thousand work as 
farmers in Hajja, 38,000 in Ibb, 27,000 in Zamar, 28,000 in Amran, and 20,000 
in Al-Hudaydah, it added. "Agriculture, which was once considered one of the 
safest jobs, has now become one of the most dangerous due to the poisonous and 
cancerous pesticides used," Qurashi said.

After farming, auto repair shops employ the largest number of child labourers, 
according to the government study. "There is a significant rise in child 
labour" due to the rise in rates of poverty and unemployment, Qurashi said. In 
such circumstances, "more children will do any job regardless of how dangerous 
it is." Children are also paid to work as "hired fighters" in Yemen's tense 
north, either to fight with government-backed tribes against Zaidi Shiite 
rebels or vice-versa, in the rebels' Saada stronghold, Qurashi said.

The government knows this," he added. In addition to working from a young age, 
Yemen's children face dangers from hunger. "Half of Yemen's children are 
chronically malnourished and one out of 10 does not live to reach the age of 
five," according to the World Food Program. "Such emergency levels of chronic 
malnutrition - or stunting - are second globally only to Afghanistan, the 
proportion of underweight children is the third highest in the world after 
India and Bangladesh," it says. - AFP



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