
Audio By Carbonatix
Students across Africa converged at the 10th Africa Students and Youth Summit to discuss issues of child labour and the need for the world to act firmly and commit more resources towards fighting the problem on Thursday, July 22.
Also in attendance were global anti-child labour activist and Nobel Laureate Dr Kaylash Satyarthi, Counter Director for Plan International Ghana Solomon Tesfamariam as well as several policy actors.
The Summit is organized annually by the All-Africa Students Union to provide a voice to student and youth leaders, education policy actors, and other development partners on critical issues that affect the youth.
Opening the event on behalf of the Secretary-General of the All-Africa Students Union, Angel Mbuthia, Secretary of Gender and International Relations, charged world leaders to sit up and act more strongly against child labour.
Speaking about the pervasiveness of the problem, the Kenyan Gender Activist revealed that child labour has been further compounded by the devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic.
She noted that: “children have become the most vulnerable to the shocks of the pandemic”, and that as s a result: “a lot of them are being pushed into exploitative labour to fend for themselves or support their guardians”.
On his part, Country Director for Plan International Ghana, Solomon Tesfamariam urged for collective effort from multinational companies and industries towards the dealing with child labour.
According to Mr Tesfamariam, many times, children are engaged in the value chain of companies as cheap labour. Therefore, efforts at addressing the problem would not be successful without their collaboration and commitment.
Also speaking at the event, Nicholas De-Heer, Head of Partnerships and Programmes at the Youthbridge Foundation expressed delight at the partnership with the All-Africa Students Union.
He added his voice to the need for the world to do better to fight child labour, noting that education remains a necessary bridge to achieving this goal.
To that, he stressed the need to provide education for all children as it was the surest way to ending the cycle of poverty that plagues many children in the world.
Organizers expressed satisfaction at the event and reaffirmed their commitment to giving their fair share to ending child labour.
Latest Stories
-
Road fatalities surge in 2026 despite intensified safety efforts—NRSA
2 minutes -
Police launch manhunt over gunshots, clashes at Kotoku Onion Market
3 minutes -
IGP’s Special Operations Team gets new leadership
13 minutes -
FoSCeL to hold National World Sickle Cell Awareness Day 2026 event at KNUST
13 minutes -
Ghana earns nearly $12bn from petroleum sector since 2011
17 minutes -
Classic ‘I Told You So’ to be remade in 2027 for Ghana at 70
19 minutes -
533 admitted to Ghana Armed Forces College of Nursing and Midwifery
25 minutes -
Manhyia North MP, Akwasi Konadu questions speed of Damang mine tender process
27 minutes -
Accra hosts 24th EBID AGM as Finance Minister calls for bold action
30 minutes -
The Insurance Paradox: Of state capture, greedy monopolies, and the SIC reset
32 minutes -
AU welcomes US-Iran ceasefire, urges sustained dialogue for lasting peace
33 minutes -
Ato Forson praises EBID’s resilience and strategic impact at 24th AGM in Accra
34 minutes -
Ghana welcomes ECOWAS leaders to Accra for EBID high-level meeting
37 minutes -
Ato Forson urges ECOWAS states to honour EBID capital commitments
39 minutes -
Why Ghana’s Mobile Money security is a house of cards
42 minutes