Iran is currently one of the youngest
countries in the world, 70% of the current population of 80,957,894 are
under 35.
Despite having rich oil
and gas fields, culture and civilization, the youth and especially children in
Iran are still deprived of basic human rights.
Today in Iran, the
common belief is that child labor is ‘normal’. Parents regard their
children as additional sources of income. Some families attempt to combine
school attendance with excessively long and heavy work.
At a very early age
children often separate from their families, to earn a few cents per hour, and
are consequently exposed to serious hazards and illnesses. You may find them on
the streets of large cities like Tehran, Esfahan, and Tabriz, in large numbers.
They simply do not have enough time to go to school and improve their future
prospects.
Recently Iranian media
published reports on seven million child laborers, as well as a significant
number of children abused in the drug trade.
The state-run ISNA news
agency quoted three officials of Iranian regime on June 2, 2017.
Sarah Rezaie, a member of the
so-called Imam Ali population, reduced the dimension of this social problem by
claiming that there are two million working children in Iran, but unofficial
statistics show the number of child laborers is at seven million.
She announced that
these children are between 10 to 15 years old and added: “There are some pieces
of evidence that show even 5-years-old children and babies are also caught in
forced labor.”
She described the
situation of children working in some of the metropolitan areas of Iran as
“disastrous… and this has become a kind of norm.”
Rezaei pointed to the
existence of shops where adolescents, often addicted themselves, sell
addictive substances such as nas, pan, glass, and crack, adding that “these
children are used in other cities of Sistan and Baluchestan province.”
These children swallow
these drugs and after they crossed the border they expel them. Many have died
in the process.
Sousan Maziarfar speaks of the
children who search in garbage dumps for food… said the average age of these
children is 12 years. “41% of these children are illiterate and 37% of
them have dropped out of the school in order to work,” she added.
Maziarfar revealed that
many of these children not only face disease but also having their faces,
fingers and toes chewed and wounded by rats.
Soraya Azizpanah, a member of the
association for the protection of the rights of the Children, also quoted
Iranian regime parliament’s research center, which according to ISNA news
agency, indicates 3.2 million children have dropped out of school to work.
In Iran, child victims
of exploitation have the right to protection from all forms of ill-treatment,
abuse, neglect, and violence. Every child has the right to live, learn, and
play, to be happy, safe, and free. But under the tyrannical rule of the
mullahs, children in Iran are deprived of basic human rights. By spending its
treasure and time on foreign adventures in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, and Lebanon, the
Iranian regime paved the way for the sale and trafficking of children, forced
or compulsory labor, including use in war. In the 1980-1988 war with Iraq, Iran
used child soldiers extensively, with
estimates of up to 100,000 killed. The sent the children into battle with a
plastic ‘key to paradise” around their necks, issued personally by the
ayatollah. That's childhood in the theocracy of the mullahs.
Source: Child labor in Iran
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