AP/ October 30, 2012, 10:31 PM

For many Egyptian children, hard labor trumps school

An Egyptian child stands in front of a tire repair shop where he works in Cairo, Egypt, on Oct. 2, 2012.

An Egyptian child stands in front of a tire repair shop where he works in Cairo, Egypt, on Oct. 2, 2012. / AP Photo

CAIRO It's early in the morning, and 13-year-old Ezzat is hard at work in one of Cairo's pottery workshops in an ancient part of the Egyptian capital. He sorts through the day's production. In the same area of workshops, three barefoot boys under the age of 12 carry clay pieces from inside the factory out into the sun to dry.

"I go to school, but I decided not to go today because it is time to paint the clay," said Ezzat, whose brother runs the workshop. Ezzat refused to give his last name.

The Egyptian government estimates that some 1.6 million minors work - almost 10 percent of population aged 17 or under - often in arduous conditions. Other experts put the number at nearly twice that, given that so many work in informal sectors and are difficult to track. In 2011, a U.S. Department of Labor report said Egypt had made some efforts to eliminate the worst forms of child labor, but it said the country has not addressed gaps in legal enforcement to protect children.

Some child labor activists worry that protections for children could be loosened further under the new constitution still being written. Earlier this month, the Egyptian Coalition for Children's Rights warned that early drafts of the document did not include as firm prohibitions on child labor as past constitutions.

In Cairo's Tahrir Square, famous as the epicenter of the 2011 revolution that toppled Hosni Mubarak's one-party rule, children can be seen selling flags, popcorn and tea whenever a demonstration draws a crowd. On calmer days when traffic is flowing through the square boys will try and wipe the city's dust off the cars stuck in traffic to earn a few coins. Young boys can be found in the more upmarket neighborhoods of Cairo flogging a dozen and a half fresh roses for 10 Egyptian pounds, about $1.6.

A young boy is almost never missing from an Egyptian mechanic's workshop. Usually covered in grease and grime they fetch the tools, get the dirtiest work and are often physically abused with little or no recourse.

A short drive out of Cairo and all along the vast Nile valley children can be found working in the fields as hired farmhands or on family plots. Brick factories along the Nile also employ children who often endure extreme physical exertion in hot weather.

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quincytodd says:
This is just more evidence that Egypt is ripe for a Communist Revolution similar to that of China in 1949. When the Israelis occupied the Sanai Peninsula, they established Kibutzes there. After 1982, when Egypt was remanded to Mubarak's Egypt, these Kibutzes were shut down and the land became idle! And of course, child labor went up astronomically under Mubarak despite massive U.S. and Saudi foreign aid.
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enoughsaidu says:
What to help, stop buying non US made products. Now I do understand that sometimes that is really hard. But if more people made an effort to buy american, we would have less economic issues.
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tmittelstaed says:
how many thousands of years has Egypt been making bricks?

You would think they have enough of them, now.
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skeezix06 says:
Why did this story make me think of Gingrich?
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