Global leaders demand immediate end to illegal youth exploitation
International communities are uniting on June 12 to observe World Day Against Child Labour, focusing on aggressive legal and social reforms to rescue millions of working minors. Originally established by the International Labour Organization in 2002, this annual event drives community action and policy changes. Current data reveals a sobering reality: roughly 138 million children remain stuck in forced employment globally, with 54 million working in dangerous environments that threaten their health and growth.
Organizers launched the 2026 initiative under the banner "Red Card to Child Labour: Fair play for children, decent work for adults." This global push builds on momentum from the recent Sixth Global Conference on the Elimination of Child Labour held in Marrakech, Morocco. Leaders there signed the Marrakech Global Framework for Action, establishing accelerated strategies to meet United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. In Odisha, local authorities have similarly intensified village-level tracking systems to ensure drop-out youth return to classrooms rather than fields.
Socioeconomic experts argue that ending youth exploitation requires fixing structural poverty. The strategy relies on multiple foundational goals: