Description:
Yasmin (5 years old) pulls Khatidja (1 year old), her younger sister using a nylon thread that is tied to infants hand. While their mothers work in battery recycling workshop, older children are usually responsible to look after their younger siblings, and often means used to do so could be very inadequate, inappropriate as well as at times cruel and dangerous. The environment in and around the workshop is full of carbon dust and other waste. Children play in the factory area until they are tired and ready to sleep. Most children have chest and eyes infection. Environment is so polluted, most children suffers from one or the other kind of infections all the time. Some even have streaks of blood coming out of their noses all the time...There are hundreds of other informal factories and workshops inside and on the outskirts of the city of Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh. The industry employs thousands of women and children. All day long women and children break used batteries to get reusable parts and tiny pieces of metal out of them. Once separated, these materials are sent to battery manufacturing factories and workshops that either reuse them or melt them to make other useful materials. ..While breaking used batteries or even playing, children inhale millions of fine carbon dust particles from the batteries throughout the day. Depending on how much work they do, each of them get between 5-15 Taka per day (US$ 1.00 = Taka 60). It takes a young child 4-12 days to earn just one US dollar...Children in these workshops face some of the worst condition of life anywhere in the world. None of the children go to school. Although they work hard and need nutritious food, they hardly eat much. Its amazing that they still look happy and manage to crack a smile every now and then. September 2004.
Credits:
Shehzad - (Pakistan) Noorani/Majority World
Description:
Yasmin (5 years old) pulls Khatidja (1 year old), her younger sister using a nylon thread that is tied to infants hand. While their mothers work in battery recycling workshop, older children are usually responsible to look after their younger siblings, and often means used to do so could be very inadequate, inappropriate as well as at times cruel and dangerous. The environment in and around the workshop is full of carbon dust and other waste. Children play in the factory area until they are tired and ready to sleep. Most children have chest and eyes infection. Environment is so polluted, most children suffers from one or the other kind of infections all the time. Some even have streaks of blood coming out of their noses all the time...There are hundreds of other informal factories and workshops inside and on the outskirts of the city of Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh. The industry employs thousands of women and children. All day long women and children break used batteries to get reusable parts and tiny pieces of metal out of them. Once separated, these materials are sent to battery manufacturing factories and workshops that either reuse them or melt them to make other useful materials. ..While breaking used batteries or even playing, children inhale millions of fine carbon dust particles from the batteries throughout the day. Depending on how much work they do, each of them get between 5-15 Taka per day (US$ 1.00 = Taka 60). It takes a young child 4-12 days to earn just one US dollar...Children in these workshops face some of the worst condition of life anywhere in the world. None of the children go to school. Although they work hard and need nutritious food, they hardly eat much. Its amazing that they still look happy and manage to crack a smile every now and then. September 2004.
Date Created:
0000-00-00 00:00:00
Author:
Shehzad Noorani
Country:
Bangladesh
Copyright Notice:
Copyright Majority World
Filename:
MWC010200.jpg
File Date/Time:
1471650850
File Size:
16980144
File Type:
2
Mime Type:
image/jpeg
Sections Found:
ANY_TAG, IFD0, EXIF
Image Description:
Yasmin (5 years old) pulls Khatidja (1 year old), her younger sister using a nylon thread that is tied to infant’s hand. While their mothers work in battery recycling workshop, older children are usually responsible to look after their younger siblings, a