I will be out of the office starting 06/10/2011 and will not return until
06/27/2011.

For any urgent matters please contact the Deputy Country Director
(Operations) Mr. Dominique Frankefort during the period 10 - 14 June and
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Hi All,

Here is a link to a new fund for the family of slain Pakistani journalist Syed Saleem Shahzad.....


http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Front_Page/MF08Aa01.html#.Te7TMMhsKlA;twitter


Pass it along if you can.

--
===========
IQBAL KHATTAK
Bureau Chief,
Daily Times,
Badshah Tower, 3rd Floor,
Qayyum Stadium Road, Peshawar.
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Pakistan.
Ph: [92-91] 526 14 90
Fax:[92-91] 526 14 89
Cell: [92-333] 910 91 44
www.dailytimes.com.pk
www.rsf.org

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__,_._,___

 


 

Saarc CCI vows to promote regional trade, peace

Easy visa facility to ensure augmented ties

 

Dated: June 10

 

Islamabad: South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) on Friday vowed to play more active role in promoting trade, peace and development in the region aimed at political stability.

 

Governments and business community must utilise the Saarc Chambers' Forum to develop cordial relations between the member states, said Iftikhar Ali Malik, Vice President Saarc Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

 

Malik said this while speaking at a reception hosted by SAARC Chamber in honour of Rajinder Kumar Sharma, outgoing Commercial Counsellor of Indian High Commission and his successor Arvind Saxena.

 

He lauded the initiative of Pakistan and India to ease visa restrictions saying it will help break the logjam to further expand bilateral relations at the people-to-people level.

 

Malik further said that Pakistani business community will continue to strive to further strengthen its special and cordial relations with all Saarc countries to boost economic and trade activities in the region.

 

"RK Sharma has played a historic role in enhancing commercial ties between Pakistan and India at a time when trade was threatened," said Malik adding that arms race will lead us nowhere while struggle for prosperity will help everyone.

 

At the occasion, Secretary General Saarc CCI Iqbal Tabish Pakistan and India , the major players in the grouping, should enjoy a special relationship in the days ahead which is in the interest of everyone.

 

He said that the efforts of Mr. Sharma for a change are visible enough and we are loosing a very competent officer.

 

He called upon civil society, traders and parliaments of the Saarc countries to work together to promote trade, commerce, and regional cooperation.

 

Tabish said that it is responsibility of every individual to realize the objectives of the Saarc CCI, besides contributing to peace, harmony, understanding and progress.

 

"SAARC is capable of eliminating the ever increasing poverty from region, which generates less than 2 per cent of world income, supports 22 per cent of world population and 44 percent of the world's poor," Tabish informed.

 

Mr. Sharma said that Pakistani business community is blessed with very honest, competent and committed leadership like Tariq Sayeed, Iftikhar Ali Malik and Ghulam Ali.

 

The untiring efforts of Pakistani business leaders to bridge gaps and create linkages between Pakistan and India have resulted in strengthened relations which is helping 1.4 billion people of South Asia , he said.

 

Our dream of poverty reduction will only come true rapidly if the business community of two countries continue pushing their positive agenda, he said.

 

VP FPCCI, Fazal Elahi, Chairman FPCCI Capital Office Hameed Akhtar Chadda, Chairman Coordination Raza Khan, former VP FPCCI Malik Zubair, Kanwar Qutbuddin, President ICCI Mahfooz Elahi, President RCCI Syed Ali Raza, Chairman Media Malik Sohail Hussain and other prominent business leaders were also present on the occasion.

 

--

Malik Sohail Hussain

Chairman FPCCI Standing

Committee on Media and PR

Cell 03215155500  and  03335155300

FPCCI +92-51-2251891-3. Fax +92-51-251894


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__,_._,___
 

PRESS RELEASE



Friday 10 June 2011

ILO/11/00

EMBARGO: For publication/broadcast on or after 1000 GMT

 

 

World Day Against Child Labour 2011

 

ILO calls for urgent action against hazardous forms of child labour

 

Islamabad (ILO News) – In a new report issued for World Day Against Child Labour, the International Labour Organization (ILO) warns that a staggeringly high number of children are still caught in hazardous work[1]— some 115 million of the world's 215 million child labourers—and calls for urgent action to halt the practice.

 

The report, "Children in hazardous work: what we know, what we need to do," cites studies from both industrialised and developing countries indicating that every minute of every day, a child labourer somewhere in the world suffers a work-related accident, illness or psychological trauma.

 

The report also says that although the overall number of children aged 5 to 17 in hazardous work declined between 2004 and 2008, the number aged 15-17 actually increased by 20 percent during the same period, from 52 million to 62 million.

 

"Despite important progress over the last decade, the number of children in child labour worldwide – and particularly in hazardous work – remains high", said ILO Director-General Juan Somavia. "Governments, employers and workers must   act together to give strong leadership in shaping and implementing the policies and action that can end child labour. The persistence of child labour is a clear indictment of the prevailing model of growth. Tackling work that jeopardises the safety, health or morals of children must be a common and urgent priority."

 

Last year, the ILO's Global Report on child labour warned that efforts to eliminate the worst forms of child labour were slowing down and expressed concern that the global economic crisis could "further brake" progress toward the goal of eliminating the worst forms of child labour by 2016.  One year on, the ILO remains extremely concerned with the impact of the crisis on children.

 

The report calls for a renewed effort to ensure that all children are in education at least until the minimum age of employment and for countries to establish a hazardous work list as required by ILO child labour Conventions.  It also says that urgent action is needed to tackle hazardous work by children who have reached the minimum age but may be at risk in the workplace and calls for training and organizing such young workers so that they are aware of risks, rights and responsibilities in the workplace.

 

The report also says exposure to hazards can have a particularly severe impact on children, whose bodies and minds are still developing late into teenage years. The report looks in detail at six economic sectors: crop agriculture, fishing, domestic service, mining and quarrying, and street and service industries.

 

The study notes that the problem of children in hazardous work is not confined to developing countries. Evidence from the US and Europe also point to a high vulnerability of youth to workplace accidents.

 

Other main findings include:

 

·         Children have higher rates of injury and death at work than adults, as shown by a range of research studies.

·         A substantial number of children experience long working hours that significantly increases the risk of injury.

·         The largest number of children in hazardous work is in Asia and the Pacific.  However, the largest proportion of children in hazardous work relative to the overall number of children in the region is in sub-Saharan Africa.

·         Most of the decline in the total numbers of children in hazardous work is among girls.

·         Over 60 per cent of children in hazardous work are boys

·         Hazardous work is more commonly found in agriculture including fishing, forestry, livestock-herding and aquaculture in addition to subsistence and commercial farming.

 

The ILO report concludes that while there is a need to strengthen workplace safety and health for all workers, specific safeguards for adolescents between the minimum age of employment and the age of 18 are needed.  These measures need to be part of a comprehensive approach in which employer and worker organizations and the labour inspectorate have particularly critical parts to play. 

 

So far 173 of the ILO's 183 Member States have committed themselves to tackling hazardous work by children 'as a matter of urgency' by ratifying ILO Convention No. 182 on the worst forms of child labour.

 

In Pakistan, the ILO is providing technical assistance to the Government of Pakistan to conduct the second national Child Labour Survey during 2011-2012. Presently, the only national level data is from the 1996 National Child Labour Survey conducted by the Federal Bureau of Statistics, which estimated 3.3 million child labourers in Pakistan. The new child labour survey will provide updated statistical information on the extent of child labour within the country.

 



[1] ILO Convention No. 182 (1999) on the Worst Forms of Child Labour refers to hazardous work as work that harms the health, safety and morals children. The Convention itself does not define what this includes, instead leaving it to the countries to do so in the form of what is commonly called the "hazardous work list".

***


For more information on child labour or to request interviews, please contact the ILO International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour at + 41 22 799 6164 or 6107  (English), or via email: ipec@ilo.org. In Pakistan +92 51 2276456-8 islamabad@ilo.org

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x==x==x==x==x==x

Please note that,
It is a common platform for journalists and all others who are interested in knowing about the issues that are sometimes not reported. This group favours philosophy of progress, reform and the protection of civil liberties. Please share and educate others. The owners and managers of this site do not necessarily agree with any of the information. It is an open forum; everyone is allowed to share anything. Mails sent by members and non-members are subject to approval. However, we are not responsible in any way for the contents of mails / opinion sent by members. We do not guarantee that the information will be completely accurate. (Nor can print and electronic media). If you find content on this site which you feel is inappropriate or inaccurate, incomplete, or useless you are most welcome to report it or contradict it.
Thanks a lot.
.

__,_._,___