Sunday, November 27, 2011

Article 2 on child labor

SHANGHAI — China said Wednesday that it was investigating whether hundreds or perhaps thousands of children from poor areas in the southwest part of the country had been sold to work as slave laborers* in booming coastal factory cities.
Authorities in southern Guangdong Province, near Hong Kong, said they had already rescued more than 100 children from factories in Dongguan*, a huge manufacturing city known for producing and exporting toys, textiles and electronics.
The children, mostly 13 to 15 years old*, were often tricked or kidnapped* by employment agencies working in an impoverished part of western Sichuan Province, and then sent to factory towns in Guangdong, where they were often forced to work as much as 300 hours a month for little money*, according to government officials and accounts from the state-owned media.
The authorities in southern China said Wednesday that they had arrested several people involved in the case and that they were trying to determine the identities of the children.
"These youngsters have no ID cards, so it makes it difficult to identify them," said Zhang Xiang, a spokesman for the Guangdong Labor Bureau. The child labor scandal was uncovered by Southern Metropolis Daily, a crusading newspaper based in Guangzhou, in southern China, less than a year after the authorities said they had rescued hundreds of people, including children, from working as "slave laborers" in brick kilns in the north and central part of the country.
Many of the workers in that case also said they had been kidnapped.*
The new child labor case "is quite typical," said Hu Xingdou, a professor of economics and social policy at the Beijing Institute of Technology. "China's economy is developing at a fascinating speed, but often at the expense of laws, human rights and environmental protection."
Professor Hu said that although Beijing had pushed to improve labor conditions throughout the nation, local governments were still driven by incentives to make their economies grow, so they tried to lure cheap labor. "Most of the work force comes from underdeveloped or poverty-stricken areas," he said. "Some children are even sold by their parents, who often don't have any idea of the working conditions."
The child labor cases are an embarrassment to the Chinese government*, which has in recent years announced a series of nationwide crackdowns on child labor and labor law violations.
But experts say rising labor, energy and raw-material costs, and labor shortages in some parts of southern China, have caused some factory owners to cut costs or find new sources of cheap labor, including child labor.
Even factories that supply global companies, including Wal-Mart Stores, have been accused in recent years of using child labor, and violating local labor laws. Big corporations have stepped up their factory audits, but suppliers are sometimes adept are hiding operations and workers from auditors.
Officials in Dongguan say they are now investigating all factories in the area to determine whether any are employing children. Young people can legally go to work in factories when they turn 16.
In a series of articles this week, journalists working for Southern Metropolis Daily wrote that they had traveled to Liangshan, a prefecture in Sichuan Province, to pose as recruiters and to interview parents and other residents.
The newspaper said recruiters and labor agencies working in Liangshan often transported children south and then "sold" them to factories at virtual auctions in Guangdong Province, one of China's biggest manufacturing centers and home to a huge population of migrant workers.
At some coastal factories, children were even lined up and selected based on their body type, the journalists wrote.
The newspaper also alleged that when the children were paid, they received about three renminbi per hour, or about 43 cents, far below the local minimum wage, about 64 cents an hour. By law, overtime pay is much higher.*
Chen Fulin, a government spokesman in Liangshan, said in a telephone interview on Wednesday that the articles on child labor in Southern Metropolis Daily were correct.
"So far, we have detected and found four people in Zhaojue County suspected of luring the youngsters from Liangshan to Dongguan and forcing them to work in factories," he said. "We are dealing with the illegal employment agencies and the labor dealers, according to the law." In its report, Southern Metropolis Daily said some children had been threatened with death if they tried to escape from labor recruiters.
The newspaper did not identify the coastal factories where the children worked, but the report said that one was a toy factory in Dongguan, and that it had not been hard for the journalists to uncover the labor scandal.
"Since journalists could discover the facts by secret interviews in a few days," Southern Metropolis Daily wrote in a separate editorial on Tuesday, "how could the labor departments show no interest in it and turn aside from it for such a long time?"

* Sold? a job is a job you can quit and the company dosen't own you. This is slavery. You can not buy humans.
* Only 100. there are 250 million children affected and only 100 saved. they need to step up there game because this is illegal and yet the whole world knows.
* 13 to 15. it's like kids my age working from dawn till dusk. It's horrible and scary.
* 300 hours a month. We go to school about 180 hours a month. probably less do to weekends and breaks. This is outrageous.
* Kidnapping!!!??? i thought that people sold there children but they kidnap them and force them to work! this is dead on slavery.
* It is emmbarssing. The whole world knows where most of our products are from. It's from children working like slaves no being slaves. It's not some secret.
* thay are paid 43 or 64 cents. I can buy a box of lemon heads at the deli with that i can buy a lolli pop or a jolly rancher with the amount of money they make per day. It's just depressing. 

Article 1 on child labor


Child Labor

Author And Page Information

  • by Anup Shah
  • This Page Last Updated Monday, January 01, 2001
Child labor is not an easy issue to resolve; while it seems noble to immediately withdraw investments and cooperation with firms and factories that employ child labor it may do more harm than good. Many of these children are from very poor families and work to pay for their family and/or their education*. Depriving them of this income has led to some children seeking different, lower paid work, and even prostitution in some cases*. Other ways with schemes to help children would likely be needed so that this labor can be phased out. The same has been suggested by the International Labor Organization (ILO), at a meeting in Mexico City in 1999, who also pointed out that child labor affects over 250 million children*, 30 percent of which are in Latin America. A gradual phase out is said to be a more preferable solution.
According to the UK Committee for UNICEF, poverty is the most common factor contributing to child labor. In addition, "debt, bloated military budgets and structural adjustment programmes imposed by the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, have eroded the capacity of many governments to provide education and services for children*, and have also pushed up prices for basic necessities". (For more information on these aspects, also see this site's section on causes of poverty and the harmful structural adjustment policies.)
According to UNICEF, Somalia and USA are the only two countries in the world that havenot ratified the United Nation's Convention on the Rights of the Child. The convention is the world's most widely ratified treaty. (USA have signed it, but Somalia has neither signed, nor ratified it, at the time I write this -- and Somalia doesn't currently have an internationally recognized government, which is why they cannot ratify the convention. The US have no such excuse.)
Global March LogoA huge movement called the Global March Against Child Labor, (which didn't get much media coverage in the USA), was an important event with marches in many major cities around the world drawing global attention towards the most heinous human rights violation: child labor and child slavery. The six-month long intercontinental March took off from Philippines in mid-January 1998, culminating in Geneva to coincide with the Debate Session of the International Labor Organization (ILO) on the Draft Convention on Child Right.
To find out more about children with regards to trade, labor, rights etc. the following may be helpful:
* It's pretty sad that families do not have much of choice. they know what they are doing, they know it's wrong but they need money and it's one of the few options they have.

*Prostiution? I feel like it draws the line. No one can have the heart to sell there children into sexual slavery. But some people do and that makes my stomach turn.

* 250 million is too big for the number of child workers. It hurts that companies don't give a damn about anything except expanding profits.

* It's to sad that countries have to cut ediucation. It's such an important factor, what will happen here if no one learns anything? nothing will get done, we will resort back to a dark age.


Sunday, November 20, 2011

2 person social issue poem (indivual)

THE LIFE WE LIVE IN IS NOT ALWAYS FAIR
My mother grounded me all week, I’m going to miss the party this weekend. I hate her.

My mother flung me down the stairs this morning, it’s the second time this week.

SOMETIMES I WANT TO LET GO OF IT
She’s horribly mean, she always sits me down for those endless hours about why I should call her when I leave school. It’s so annoying. I can hardly stand it. It’s like she hates me. 

And when I come home from school it’s the same routine, clean the kitchen, take out the trash, do the laundry, make dinner, clean up dinner, fold and put away the laundry and by 11:00 do my homework and at 2:00 am go to sleep. If I’m one minute late it’s a slap in the face and no dinner. To please her is an impossible task I feel like I can’t do much longer.


THE AFTERMATH
Is the worst part, the glares, the remarks makes me want to hide and cry. This woman? My mother? Hard to believe.

The sore feeling you get afterwards, your cheeks red from the smack, sore muscles, the stress, and the vomit. I’m scared, I’m sick of the hell in which day by day suffer in. Do other people feel this? I doubt it.

BUT I HOLD MY HEAD UP

There are the times she loves me, the times she hugs me when I get home from school, “how was your day, sweetie?” makes my entire day. I love her no matter what she says.

To remember the time she once loved me makes me smile, it’s in my heart and my memories, her cold looks of hate and her smacks of pain are bad but I know maybe down in her heart there is a tiny spark of love for me which maybe one day will grow, but for now I play by her rules.
__________________________________________________________________________________

I wrote my indivual poem on child abuse. It's a 2 person thing about one of them is slightly neglected by his or her mother. They do not have the best mother in the world but they are uterly angry about, feeling as though they are slowly slipping out the grasp of there mother's unconditional love. It hurts them and brings the pain. They can't deal with it but they learn to look at bright side of things and to remember that she will always love her.

The other person is an abused child. Her/his mother is on the brink of evil and insanity. the child is abused phisicaly and constantly. He/she is starved and tourmented. There were times she could recall when her mother was sweet and loving which is long gone that keeps her/him alive. To keep her/him still alive she pertends that her/his mother still loves them.

Both children are hurt by there parents. Some rarley and others regularly.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Social issues: The Hunger Games

In my independent reading book The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins a big social issue is poverty. In there world the nation Panem, through out the districts people do not have a enough to eat. In district 12 many people like the main character Katniss are forced to do illegal poaching which is highly punishable to be able to trade it in to feed her family. Durring the annual hunger games a fight to the death  many people make there children open up a tesseract which means you enter your name in once more making your chance a getting picked much greater, many families are forced to take the risk due to the poverty in their districts. A possible solution is that the capitol and their government  who is so rich and lavish should have a tax on the civilians of the capitol citythat would contribute to buy food and give it out to families in the district, because if everyone would contribute a small amount of money an it could largley effect hungry families in a district.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

The Hunger Games:


I've recently been reading The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins. I'm not fished reading but here's the basic plot that I know: It's the future, North America and maybe other places have fallen, it the ashes of North America rises the all powerful Panem. Panem is divided into 12 but once 13 districts and a capitol city. Each District as it's own  culture. A girl Named Katniss is a smart and skilled fighter, she's sixteen years old. In Panem's History there was once an uprising of the districts but they lost, as punishment each district gives up one boy and one girl to compet in the Hunger Games, a TV brodcasted fight to the death. It's picked at random. One year her 12 year old sister Prim is chosen so Katniss steps up and voulenters her life to take her sisters place. They are on they're way to the capitol, she goes with the boy competer Peeta. When they arrive that are passed around from there stylists to the parade to the tower leading up the day they do to the arena to fight in the Hunger Games...

Thats all i've gotten to in the book. It's really intresting and the kind of action packed book you can't put down. I feel like the Hunger Games is outrageous. The actual game is a sick and horrifying slaughter where children are forced to enter without say. And if the child was to win the Hunger Games that would probably not be able to sleep at night knowing that they killed 11 children. Which would mostly end up to that person having post dramtic stress disorder or drinking problems. It's crazy how Kantniss took her place but it was certanily the right thing to do, she is small, young and too kind to hurt anyone and would end up dead within a few days. Katniss however stands a chance. Perhaps the punshiment for the hunger games was too much, and most likely didn't deserve it, life is too precious to deserve it.