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| Congo's child miner shame BBC News June 12, 2006 |
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By Orla Guerin To commemorate World Day Against Child Labour, BBC News has spent a day with child miners in the Democratic Republic of Congo, who work for about one dollar per day. At Ruashi mine, in the Eastern province of Katanga, almost 800 children dig for copper and cobalt.
Decu's day begins at dawn. Usually he does not eat, just drinks a little water. Then he sets off on a two-hour walk with his twin, Kaba. Both have torn sweatshirts and trousers with holes. By their side is Cedric, their friend and neighbour, who is 15. He's a quiet boy with an earnest look. He has no shoes, just flip flops on his feet. Cedric used to go to school, but now his family can't afford to send him. Informal By seven or eight each morning, the boys arrive at Ruashi mines, where huge mounds of red, brown and grey soil scar the landscape. They join the ranks of child miners - close to 800 of them, working alongside fully grown men. It's all unofficial, but it's also highly organised. CHILD LABOUR 2006 We stand at the top of one enormous mound of silky soil, looking down
into a crater about 40 metres deep. All the way down there are ghostly-looking
figures digging for copper, coated in choking grey dust. There are no
safety standards. No-one wears a hard hat. In the midst of all this, there
are some boys as young as Decu and Kaba, working with bare hands and bare
feet. "We saw boys standing waist deep in toxic water, washing soil away from nuggets of copper. One, Antoine, told us he was ten. Inherited For Cedric and the twins, the first job of the day was sifting away soil from mineral deposits. It was heavy work, especially for Decu. As he worked, he told me he wanted to be like children in Europe. "They go to school," he said. "I saw them on TV. But my father can't afford to pay my school fees. That's why my life is so hard."
The irony is that without what they can scrabble together at the mine, life for Cedric and the twins might be a lot worse. Orla Guerin's TV report can be seen on BBC 1's 10 O'Clock News at 2200
BST on Monday. |
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