Workplace violence, child labour said rife in
Nigeria Mon
Jun 27, 2011
Reuters
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By Robert Evans
GENEVA
(Reuters) - Some 15 million children work in Nigeria, often in
dangerous jobs, and many workers in Africa's most populous
nation live in fear of violence from police and employers, the
global labour grouping ITUC said on Monday.
The report said many core international labour standards that
the energy-rich African giant has signed up to were regularly
breached and there was widespread discrimination against women
and minority groups in the labour market.
"Some 15 million children are at work, many in dangerous jobs,"
said the ITUC -- the Brussels-based International Trade Union
Confederation, which represents some 175 million workers in 151
countries, including Nigeria, around the world.
"Unions frequently experience violent attacks and there is
little protection from anti-union discrimination," said the
report submitted to the 153-member World Trade Organisation
(WTO) in Geneva.
Women and minority groups face discrimination in getting jobs
and getting promotion, it said. "The gender pay gap stands at 68
percent and the majority of women are employed in precarious and
informal economic activities."
The WTO is this week discussing Nigeria's trade policies, a
process through which all its members pass regularly, and the
ITUC insists that the trade body should also look at labour
practices.
But WTO officials, and most developing country trade diplomats,
say labour conditions -- despite efforts in the past by the
United States and some European countries to bring them in --
remain outside its remit.
Nigeria, with a population of some 155 million and extensive oil
resources, has ratified all eight of the core International
Labour Organisation (ILO) conventions protecting workers' rights
including freedom of unions to organise and ending child labour.
But in a statement with the report, which detailed attacks on
workers and union offices, ITUC General Secretary Sharan Burrow
said, "Nigeria has failed to live up to this. Many Nigerian
workers live in fear of employer and police violence.
"This failure not only hurts Nigerians -- it also undermines
efforts by other governments to uphold decent employments
standards in the globalised economy," Burrow declared.
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