Despite the law prohibiting the employment of kids, many brick kiln owners throughout. Camilla’s Chauddagram Upazila hires minors to do unsafe paintings. Investigative reporting with the aid of this newspaper has found that many children are operating the 350 or so brick kilns in the Comilla district. That is an exercise in most of the brick kilns in Bangladesh. The paintings themselves are extremely risky, and there are often casualties as there’s little people protection within the industry. On January 25, we mentioned the loss of life of 13 employees while a coal-weighted down truck flipped over directly to a makeshift shed at a brick kiln in Camilla. Nine of the thirteen victims have been schoolboys from Niphamari. Children like them work part-time at brick kilns to assist their families and pay for their education.
While the authorities guarantee that steps are being taken to strengthen tracking around brick kilns so that no underage employee is employed, one should deal with the reality that the socio-monetary scenario of households that send their kids to brick kilns is terrible. Poverty drives families to pressure their youngsters to discover pictures. That said, the nearby administration must enact the law on child labor. Raising attention among brick kiln owners is sincerely one aspect of the coin. It’s as much as the neighborhood management to do their part in making it very highly-priced for brick kiln owners to disregard the regulation. Similarly, it’s far up to the authorities to cope with the issue of finding new avenues of profit-generating sports for the ones living in poverty so that they are no longer compelled to engage their kids in hazardous paintings to assist their families.