Global leaders vow to take action to end child exploitation
NEW DELHI: Over 200 global leaders and laureates on Sunday pledged to use their voices to protect millions of exploited children across the world and take concrete action to improve their schooling, support those living in conflict and to end child labour.
The pledge by the prominent leaders -- who included former presidents and prime ministers, royalty from Jordan, the Netherlands and Monaco, heads of corporations and civil society groups and Nobel Peace Prize winners -- came at the end of two-day summit on children´s rights in the Indian capital.
"We will use our voices to protect and amplify the voices of millions of girls, boys and young people as equal citizens of today and decision makers of tomorrow," said the declaration at the end of the conference.
"We will take actions ... towards concrete efforts to ending child labour in all its forms, including the trafficking of children, and abolishing modern day slavery.
"The delegates included the Dalai Lama, East Timor´s former president and Nobel laureate Jose Ramos-Horta, former Australian premier Julia Gillard, Angel Gurria, Secretary-General of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development and Yemeni rights activist and Nobel peace laureate Tawakkol Karman.
According to the UN children´s agency Unicef, many children continue to live - and die - in desperate conditions.
In 2015, an estimated 5.9 million children died before reaching age 5, mostly as a result of preventable and treatable diseases.
Millions more children are denied access to education simply because their parents are poor, because they are girls, or because they are growing up in countries blighted by conflict such as in Syria, Yemen and Iraq.
Even though poverty is falling globally, nearly half of the world´s extreme poor are children, and poverty makes them vulnerable to exploitation, says Unicef.
There are 168 million child labourers across the world, with more than half involved in hazardous work in sectors such as agriculture, mining, construction, manufacturing and services, says the International Labour Organization (ILO).
While many people believe slavery no longer exists in the modern age, the ILO estimates that 5.5 million of these children are enslaved -- born into servitude, trafficked for sex work, or trapped in debt bondage or forced labour.
Child rights activist and Nobel laureate Kailash Satyarthi said he organised the Delhi summit because the voices of world´s most marginalised children were not being heard, and that their continued suffering was unacceptable.
-
Sarah Ferguson, Shamed Andrew Spotted In ‘family Costume Drama’ -
Kylie Kelce Reveals Why She Barely Planned Her Wedding Day? -
Why Shamed Andrew Called His Victims ‘Mrs Windsor’ -
Kate Hudson Explains Why Acting Isn't Discussed At Home -
Prince William, Kate Middleton Epstein Statement Was AI Generated, Says Expert -
Sarah Ferguson On Her Way To Hurt 'only Two People Who Care About Her' -
World’s Top PC Maker Sounds Alarm Over Memory Chip Shortage -
King Charles Is ‘clearly Worried’ Andrew Has Tarnished Royal Image -
Royal Family Loses 'loyal' Worker After King Charles Disliked His Work? -
James Van Der Beek's Quiet Sacrifice Before Death Comes To Light -
Suspect Kills Six Across Florida Before Taking His Own Life -
AI Helps Researchers Identify 2,000-year-old Roman Board Game Stone -
Inside Kate Middleton, Prince William’s Nightmare Facing Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor -
Margaret Qualley Shares Heartfelt Confession About Husband Jack Antonoff: 'My Person' -
Savannah Guthrie Shares Sweet Childhood Video With Missing Mom Nancy: Watch -
Over $1.5 Million Raised To Support Van Der Beek's Family