Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Abolishing Slavery and its Contemporary Forms
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- 3. Implementation strategies
Forms of Slavery
39 2. The United Nations and child labour 128. The Slavery Convention did not specifically refer to child slavery as a particular category in its definitions of slavery and the slave trade. It is clear that Governments’ attitudes to child labour at that time were somewhat ambivalent, and possibly more tolerant, than they are today. That approach had changed by the time the Supplementary Convention was being drafted; a spe- cific reference to the exploitation of young persons was included in addition to an explicit prohi- bition of debt bondage regarding both adults and children. 220 129. The Supplementary Convention also prohibits “any institution or practice whereby a child or young person under the age of 18 years, is delivered by either or both of his natural parents or by his guardian to another person, whether for reward or not, with a view to the exploitation of the child or young person or of his labour”. 221 That provision was implemented with the particular practice of “sham adoptions” in mind, but it does, in fact, cover a wider range of practices involv- ing the exploitation of children. 222 3. Implementation strategies 130. The Commission on Human Rights has adopted a Programme of Action for the Elimination of the Exploitation of Child Labour (“Programme of Action”) which identifies the following three forms of child labour as international crimes that violate the international standards against sla- very: • The sale of children and similar practices (including fake adoption); • Child pornography, trafficking in child pornography and international trafficking in chil- dren for immoral purposes; • Underage maid-servants in a position of servitude. 223 The Programme of Action calls for “energetic repressive action” to deal with such cases, and also calls on States to review their legislation “with a view to the absolute prohibition of employment of children” in the following seven sectors: (a) Employment before the normal age of completion of primary schooling in the country concerned; (b) Underage maid service; (c) Night work; (d) Work in dangerous or unhealthy conditions; 220 The Supplementary Convention also contains an implicit prohibition of the exploitation of the labour of young girls through early marriage. Hans Engen concluded in his report that a supplementary convention on slavery was nec- essary to cover “slavery-like practices not included in the Slavery Convention 1926”, United Nations document E/2673 (1955). 221 Supplementary Convention, supra note 20, art. 1(d). 222 A “sham adoption” occurs when a family, generally in financial difficulty, gives or sells a child to a richer fam- ily, nominally to be adopted, but in reality to work in the rich family’s household without enjoying either the same status or the same treatment as ordinary children in the household into which they are adopted. A similar practice, still widely reported, involves children being sent to the households of relatives or others who are expected by the child’s parents to give special attention to their education but in reality exploit the child’s labour. The largest group of children whose predicament falls into this category, currently numbering in the millions and primarily girls, are those employed as live- in domestics. 223 Programme of Action for the Elimination of the Exploitation of Child Labour, Commission on Human Rights resolution 1993/79, United Nations document E/CN.4/1993/122, para. 14. |
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