Ethiopian children are being sold for as little as $1,20 (about R7,90) to work as domestic workers or prostitutes, the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said on Wednesday.
Up to 20 000 children, some 10 years old, are sold each year by their parents and trafficked by unscrupulous brokers to work in cities across Ethiopia, the IOM added.
The figures were announced as the Ethiopian government, the United Nations and the IOM launched a campaign to highlight the suffering endured by vulnerable children in this Horn of Africa nation.
Dubbed “Ethiopia’s Campaign for Vulnerable Children”, the campaign encourages candidates running in local elections scheduled for early 2006 to push the issue on to the agenda.
Top athletes — including Ethiopian Olympic gold medallist Kenenisa Bekele — have also joined the campaign to highlight the plight of vulnerable or orphaned children.
There are an estimated 4,6-million orphans in Ethiopia, about 13% of all the country’s children. About 200 000 children are believed to live on the streets of the capital, Addis Ababa.
“While this crisis of vulnerable children is depriving children of their rights to human development, it is also proving to be a growing burden on already impoverished communities,” said Bjorn Ljungqvist, head of the UN Children’s Fund in Ethiopia.
A legal expert with the IOM’s counter-trafficking unit in Addis Ababa, Alem Brook, said Ethiopia has one of the highest rates of internal trafficking of children in the world.
“The parents are often deceived with promises of money or that the child will be educated,” Alem told journalists. “Traffickers pay around 10 to 20 Ethiopian birr [$1,20 to $2,40] for each child. We are talking about thousands of children each year.”
She said the specific numbers are almost impossible to calculate due to the clandestine nature of the trade, but estimated that it could be up to 20 000 each year.
About two-thirds of the children are trafficked by brokers who take a percentage of the child’s earnings, while one-third are trafficked by friends and family.
According to the IOM, trafficking is the fastest-growing crime in the world; it is believed to net those involved about $10-billion a year.
Alem said the majority of boys and girls end up as domestic labourers, commercial sex workers, weavers or professional beggars.
The IOM warned that thousands of Ethiopian women are also trafficked abroad. At least 10 000 have been sent to the Gulf States to work as prostitutes, the agency said.
“There are increasing numbers of young women being recruited from here for sexual purposes,” Alem said.
Traffickers in Ethiopia expect to earn about 7 000 birr (about $800) for each victim they send overseas, she added. However, if caught, they are liable to 20 years’ imprisonment, but few are ever prosecuted. — Irin