Friday 11 October 2013

The typical Nigerian view on CHILD LABOUR.


I witnessed this scene while sitting in a bus heading out. I saw a little boy who looked really hungry and tired, asking for help and the woman whom he was begging to help him had this to say.
BOY: Aunty, abeg help me, i dey hungry, anything! Abeg u!
WOMAN: “Abeg leave me jor, you no see your mates dey sell pure water”. 

 Everyone in the bus was laughing including the driver. Then, it dawned on me that most people in this society now see child labour as a normal thing, it was not abnormal as long as it was not their children. Children from poor homes now handle the responsibility of their parents by contributing their own quota to improve the welfare of their family. I think and believe that this is pathetic, I see little children every day on the streets, in the markets, at the bus parks and almost everywhere selling commodities for their parents or guardian. I think hawking automatically transform these children into adults. They are naturally made to think like adults in the process of hawking, they become really alert about the situations, they lose their innocence and become wild. Children who are made to hawk are exposed to all sorts of danger. They could lose their life to accidents, ritualists and the females are often victims of rape.


Poverty is so thick in Nigeria, we can’t deny this. However, children should remain children whether they are in poor or wealthy homes. “ Mama Lucky” as we fondly call her lost her husband some years ago, I did not know her personally then but I felt sorry for her, because she was young with 4 children, no education and no means of livelihood. Over the years, I have watched her remain strong, from selling roasted plantain, fish and her delicious stew to working with a caterer as a cook. She stopped speaking Pidgin English to her children, they now communicate using good English language and her children are beneficiaries of Rivers State free education program. I admire her. She handles the responsibility of taking care of her family; the burden falls on her back and not the backs of her children.  Once, I witnessed a child being knocked down by a car, the driver almost sped off but thanks to the men in the area, he was stopped and was asked to take the girl to the hospital, she was bleeding seriously.  It was a sad scene.

 I appreciate all the selfless Young Nigerians caring for people who have less. We have seen projects such as “Slum to School” and “Earth’s Haven” help a lot of Children.  We also need parents and guardians to cater for their children and not the reverse.
  
 Children should enjoy their rights and enjoy the innocence that comes with childhood. Play with toys, create games, dance, sing, act, debate, do home works, have siestas, and help with the little house chores, not taking the responsibility of providing for their family. Children should not have to tag themselves as “hustlers”.

God bless Nigeria and help us provide lasting solutions to problems such as “Child Labour”.
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