Da un reportage della televisione norvegese.
"Due to Western pressure, Bangladesh outlawed work in garment factories for children under 14.
- When the children lost their jobs, many of them ended up on the streets, as prostitutes. We know that much, says Rasmus Juhl Pedersen, adviser in Save the Children, Denmark.
Somewhere between 30.000 and 100.000 children lost their jobs when the garment factories introduced the age limit.
To work as a prostitute, maid or further down the line of production is much worse than working in the garment industry, according to Juhl Pedersen.
Western companies are so afraid of being associated with child labour that the children are thrown out of the factories even though no one has prepared any alternatives.
Well-meaning western consumers who boycott products that can be tied to child labour can do more harm than good, according to Save the Children, Denmark..."
"Due to Western pressure, Bangladesh outlawed work in garment factories for children under 14.
- When the children lost their jobs, many of them ended up on the streets, as prostitutes. We know that much, says Rasmus Juhl Pedersen, adviser in Save the Children, Denmark.
Somewhere between 30.000 and 100.000 children lost their jobs when the garment factories introduced the age limit.
To work as a prostitute, maid or further down the line of production is much worse than working in the garment industry, according to Juhl Pedersen.
Western companies are so afraid of being associated with child labour that the children are thrown out of the factories even though no one has prepared any alternatives.
Well-meaning western consumers who boycott products that can be tied to child labour can do more harm than good, according to Save the Children, Denmark..."