Children working in Madagascar’s mica mines have complained of health issues including respiratory problems.
Photograph: Jan-Joseph Stok/Terre des Hommes
Children as young as five make up more than half the number of miners scavenging for mica in Madagascar, according to a leading child rights group.
A year-long investigation by Terre des Hommes Netherlands found that
at least 11,000 children between the ages of five and 17 are employed in
quarrying and processing the shimmery, heat-resistant mineral, which is
used in everything from makeup to car paint and hugely prevalent in the automotive and electronics industry.
Children comprise as much as 62% of the overall mining workforce,
researchers found, with miners descending deep into the ground to cut
the mica by hand.
The work is dangerous, with children complaining of aching muscles, open sores and respiratory problems, according to the report, published this week by Terre des Hommes and the Dutch Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations.
Children and adults fill bags with mica to be transported away by a truck. Photograph: Jan-Joseph Stok/Terre des Hommes
The NGO is calling for companies to investigate all aspects of their
mica supply chains and get involved in programmes aimed at improving
working conditions for miners, such as the Responsible Mica Initiative in India.
“We are not calling for a boycott on mica from Madagascar, because
the people in the region where it is mined are very poor and they depend
on mica and the income it provides,” said De Voogd.
“But the exploitation of children must stop, and companies need to
take action to pay adult miners higher prices so they can earn a proper
living wage as well.
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