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Ethiopia hunts for children forced to work, marry during pandemic

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Thomson Reuters Foundation

Ethiopia has set up a network of committees to identify children forced into work or marriage during the coronavirus pandemic and to ensure schools are safe to re-open this week although campaigners fear it will hard to reverse the damage done.

Yohannes Wogasso, school improvement program director at the Ministry of Education, said authorities realised the closure of schools in March to stop the spread of COVID-19 had led to a rise in child marriage, child labour, and gender-based violence.

Ethiopia children playing

Ethiopian children play in a tree branches at a resettlement centre at Chawaka, roughly 500 kilometres south-west of the capital Addis Ababa on 25th April, 2004. PICTURE: Reuters/Antony Njuguna/File photo.

But he said reopening schools from 19th October should go some way to reversing the negative impacts, with child rights’ campaigners highlighting the crucial role of education in the fight against child labour and child marriage.

“Because of the economic challenges, many parents of low socio-economic status were obliged to use child labour and this might be exacerbated unless we reopen our schools,” Yohannes told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

He said the government had established ad-hoc committees from the federal level to the smallest administrative unit to identify marginalised and hard-to-reach children, including those already in child marriage and forced labor.

The committees would also ensure that schools could operate safely despite many lacking handwashing facilities and having limited resources to make changes.

About 17,000 schools, mainly in rural areas, have fulfilled the requirements and will reopen on Monday, said Yohannes who hoped all schools across Ethiopia would follow in coming months.

Despite rapid growth in the past decade, inequality is stark in Ethiopia where a growing number of children have been driven from their homes – by poverty or neglect – and ended up begging or selling wares to survive life on the streets, charities said.

About 16 million children aged between five and 17 are engaged in child labour across Ethiopia which has a population of about 110 million, including about 60 million people aged under 18, according to a national survey published in 2018.

UN children’s agency UNICEF has said about 40 per cent of girls are married before the age of 18, with 15 million child brides in Ethiopia, despite progress by the government to tackle early marriage in recent years. 

Child migration specialist Girmachew Adugna from the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung’s Flight and Migration Competence Center in Addis Ababa said attending school can help children escape child marriage.

But he said the pandemic had disrupted child-friendly reporting mechanisms as children could not report abuse to teachers and community health workers, who have played a key role supporting children but now focus on the COVID-19 response.

Despite schools reopening, dropouts are likely to be substantial as impoverished families may keep their children working, according to Belay Hagos, director of the Institute of Educational Research at Addis Ababa University.

Students from low-income families, girls, rural students and low-performing students were more at risk of remaining out of school, according to a survey led by the team of the Research on Improving Systems of Education program in Ethiopia.

“This [school reopening] might slow the negative effects of the pandemic on children but the effects will surely continue as the pandemic has affected the economy of households,” said Girmachew.

 

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