Wednesday, 30 November 2011

Uzbek activist urges compliance with laws on forced child labour


Dmitriy Tikhonov, a human rights activist based in Angren, has written to the Deputy Prime Minister of Uzbekistan, Rustam Azimov, asking for an end to forced child labour practices during the cotton harvest.

Tikhonov says, “I addressed my demands to Rustam Azimov because he is personally responsible for overseeing the implementation of the Cabinet of Ministers’ Resolution No.207 of 12th September 2008.”

This resolution is supposed to implement the ILO Minimum Age Convention alongside a ban on, and eradication of, child labour.

Angren authorities even recently distributed a flyer stating the use of child labour was against the law, whilst demonising and denouncing the ‘mendacious insinuations and misinformation’ in foreign media.

There is no insinuation or misinformation here. Thanks to the efforts of monitors we know that, this season, widespread use of forced child labour has been documented throughout Uzbekistan.

Any students that refuse to work the harvest are punished, their parents forced to pay to “employ” a replacement worker (at around US $60-120 according to unofficial market rates).

“Many families will literally hand over their last penny, sell property or go into debt in order to make those payments,” says Tikhonov.

The audacity of the Uzbek government is astounding. ILO conventions are ratified and ignored while leaflets denouncing the truth are distributed in cities. Despite Uzbekistan’s continued use of child labour and evident lack of respect for international law, the EU still provides the country with preferential trade tariffs. We must take action to end this; you can sign our petition to the European Parliament, which will be delivered on the 7th December, here.

Friday, 25 November 2011

Cotton Crimes is off to Brussels!

On the 7th December 2011 we'll be descending on the European Parliament with schoolchildren from Bishop Bell School in Eastbourne to hand in our Cotton Crimes campaign petition calling on the European Union to do more to stop child slavery in Uzbekistan.

Please sign our petition here to help us reach 10,000 signatures before the big day! 



Catherine Bearder, MEP for South-East England, invited the students to Brussels after they wrote to her to express their concern about buying clothes made by children in slavery and asked her to take up the issue at the European Parliament.

Our petition is calling for the European Union to stop rewarding Uzbekistan with preferential trade tariffs until the former Soviet republic ends the practice of forcing hundreds of thousands of school children as well as adults to pick its annual cotton harvest.

You can follow us on Facebook and Twitter on the day for live updates from the students who will be lobbying MEPs about this issue ahead of a key Parliamentary vote regarding an Uzbek-EU trade deal, which could make it easier for Uzbekistan to import textiles into Europe.

Please help us put a stop to this and SIGN THE PETITION HERE.