Publications
Events
Publications
UN.GIFT Publications

CSO HRW Forced begging of Talibes in Senegal
Oct 05 2010
Download right click "save as"
At least 50,000 children attending hundreds of residential Quranic schools, or daaras, in Senegal are subjected to conditions akin to slavery and forced to endure often extreme forms of abuse, neglect, and exploitation by the teachers, or marabouts, who serve as their de facto guardians. By no means do all Quranic schools run such regimes, but many marabouts force the children, known as talibés, to beg on the streets for long hours-a practice that meets the International Labour Organization's (ILO) definition of a worst form of child labor-and subject them to often brutal physical and psychological abuse. The marabouts are also grossly negligent in fulfilling the children's basic needs, including food, shelter, and healthcare, despite adequate resources in most urban daaras, brought in primarily by the children themselves.More information about human trafficking on the website of HRW.
- ILO Cost of Coercion
- ILO OSCE Anti-Trafficking Response in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia
ILO Preventing Forced Labour in Russian Construction Industry
ILO The Netherlands Roadmap for Achieving the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labour by 2016
ILO Handbook for Labour Inspectors
ILO Methodologies
ILO_Combating_Forced_Labour_EGI_2008.pdf
ILO Working paper Forced labour and human trafficking
ILO Statement
ILO Report stopping forced labour
ILO Minimum Estimate
ILO Legal aspects of trafficking




