The 2030 Agenda of the Sustainable Development Goals (SGDs) No. 8, Target 8.7 on decent work and economic growth commits the world to end modern slavery and child labour in all forms by 2025.
Child labour, forced labour and trafficking in persons can be found in almost all stages of supply chains in agriculture, mining, construction, manufacturing, retailing, service provisions even in households and the streets.
With fifty-one months to 2025, Nigeria’s pledge to join the rest of the world to eliminate child labour and other unfair labour practices remains a huge task.

The practice remains as rampant as before with little punishment, cruel inhuman habits and disassociation from the rest of the society leading to breakdown of order & Decorum, often popping up in the media.
According to the International Labour Organisation, about 25 per cent of Nigeria’s 80 million children under the age of 14 are engaged in economic activities, and the involvement of children in the construction industry is majorly in the task of brick making, carrying and stacking bricks, and other construction materials.
Speaking at a one-day workshop on ‘Reportage of Elimination of Child Labour,’ organised by the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment in Abuja on Thursday, Acting Director, Inspectorate Department of the ministry, Ajuwon Dauda, said the introduction of children into this sector is observed to begin as early as 8 years.

And as a result, 43 per cent of children in Nigeria engage in child labour’
Dauda noted that poverty remained a major driver of child labour in the country.
“Poverty is a major driver of child labour that is why the federal government is investing heavily in Social Investment Programs so that parents can receive help and use the income to train their children,” he said.
How obsolete laws contribute to an increase in child labour and other unfair labour practices
According to him, lack of political will and enforcement remained some of the major challenges in the fight again child labour in the country.

“However, despite government’s interventions and demonstrated commitment through programmes like the conditional cash transfer to poor and vulnerable Nigerians, several job creation efforts, especially through enterprise creation and MSMEs development support, homegrown school feeding programme, and several other such programmes, which have a direct or indirect impact on livelihood improvement and by extension, child labour.
“Therefore, I call on all journalists and media practitioners, whose responsibility it is to educate critical stakeholders and the general public on the negative impacts of child labour, and enlighten the public on the safety nets, as well as the school programmes designed by the government as preventative measures against child labour, to join forces with government to change the narrative and dent rising child labour participation rates. Our children are the future of this great country.”
Credit-thenation