Excessive household chores constitute child labour—GAWU

Tema, June 22, GNA – Mr Edward T. Kareweh, General-Secretary, the General Agricultural Workers Union (GAWU) has cautioned parents to weigh the household chores they allow their wards to undertake.

He said that any extreme responsibility imposed on children either to get paid or not, amounted to child labour because each had the same impact on the child’s school attendance, health, and wellbeing.

Mr Kareweh who was speaking to the Ghana News Agency in an interview in Tema, explaining that children needed to be protected because they were physically and mentally immature to protect themselves noting that, they deserved to be raised in a healthy and safe environment, where their rights would not be violated.

“There is a conflict between child labour and child work, child work can be the child following the parents to the farm, learning to cook and others, but where child work becomes harmful to the health of the child or prevents the child from going to school and wellbeing then it becomes child labour,” he stated.

The GAWU General Secretary explained that overloading children with work could affect their power to execute, especially in their performance at school and that was a critical issue that needed to be addressed with immediate effect.

He said children must be given the chance to relax after school and play for some time with their peers as it enhanced their learning capacities as well as helped in their development.

“It is good that children help their parents but there should be a limit to what they do for instance if the child goes to the farm with the parents and they are coming back, does the child also carry heavy loads of firewood to the house? He stated.

He said the Ghana Chamber of Agribusiness had joined forces with Union to get to the root causes of slavery, abuse, and force labour among others to find amicable solutions to reduce its effects.

Mr Kareweh noted that the collaboration was to also ensure that there was no modern slavery in Ghana by tackling an indecent work environment, forced labour, inadequate payment of labour and the rest.

GNA

Excessive household chores constitute child labour—GAWU

Tema, June 22, GNA – Mr Edward T. Kareweh, General-Secretary, the General Agricultural Workers Union (GAWU) has cautioned parents to weigh the household chores they allow their wards to undertake.

He said that any extreme responsibility imposed on children either to get paid or not, amounted to child labour because each had the same impact on the child’s school attendance, health, and wellbeing.

Mr Kareweh who was speaking to the Ghana News Agency in an interview in Tema, explaining that children needed to be protected because they were physically and mentally immature to protect themselves noting that, they deserved to be raised in a healthy and safe environment, where their rights would not be violated.

“There is a conflict between child labour and child work, child work can be the child following the parents to the farm, learning to cook and others, but where child work becomes harmful to the health of the child or prevents the child from going to school and wellbeing then it becomes child labour,” he stated.

The GAWU General Secretary explained that overloading children with work could affect their power to execute, especially in their performance at school and that was a critical issue that needed to be addressed with immediate effect.

He said children must be given the chance to relax after school and play for some time with their peers as it enhanced their learning capacities as well as helped in their development.

“It is good that children help their parents but there should be a limit to what they do for instance if the child goes to the farm with the parents and they are coming back, does the child also carry heavy loads of firewood to the house? He stated.

He said the Ghana Chamber of Agribusiness had joined forces with Union to get to the root causes of slavery, abuse, and force labour among others to find amicable solutions to reduce its effects.

Mr Kareweh noted that the collaboration was to also ensure that there was no modern slavery in Ghana by tackling an indecent work environment, forced labour, inadequate payment of labour and the rest.

GNA