and the special situation of the girl child in policies, programmes and indicators. The second generation of PRSP in Senegal also includes an indicator on child labour.
In Tanzania, child labour concerns are cov- ered in the operational objectives, cluster strategies as well as in the intervention pack- ages of the Poverty Reduction Strategy II. Other strategic policy areas of the docu- ment in which child labour features directly or indirectly include HIV/AIDS, vulnerable groups, social protection, and gender. An indicator on child labour is among the indi- cators for its monitoring system under the Poverty Monitoring Master Plan.
One of the seven objectives of the new Labour and Employment Policy in Nepal is to elimi- nate child labour. The Policy underlines that the Master Plan on the Elimination of Child Labour will be effectively implemented by establishing relations with other sectoral work plans prepared for the protection and development of children.
In Sri Lanka child labour concerns have been mainstreamed into the Sri Lankan national Youth Employment Policy.
The fifth national development plan of Zambia has a component on child labour and employment creation. Within the Fifth National Development Plan labour and employment priorities, elimination of child labour, with particular focus on prevention, has been identified as a specific priority area.
In Cambodia, child labour concerns have been included as a cross-cutting issue to be addressed in the newly developed Education Strategic Plan for 2006-2010 of the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport.
In the Philippines, specific indicators on child labour have been included in the Basic Education Sector Monitoring and Evalua- tion Framework.
The Ministry of Planning and Economic Policy of Costa Rica is revising the indicators that were defined in the Second National Plan for the elimination of child labour, in order to specify its follow-up within the framework of the National Development Plan and the Annual Operational Plans for the institutions. The Ministry of Public Edu- cation is developing the Education for All
Programme, which also includes the objec- tive of eliminating child labour.
The Indonesian Government Workplan 2006 refers to several activities: (1) the programme elimination of child trafficking and com- mercial sexual exploitation of children and protection of child trafficking victims; (2) programmes on child labour; and (3) imple- mentation of Presidential Decree no. 59/2002 on the National Plan of Action on the Elimi- nation of Worst Forms of Child Labour.
D. Operational Outcome 1a.2 Sub-Indicator 1a.2(i)
D: Data collection and analysis
The following are examples of several countries that have collected and analysed data on child labour.
In the Côte d’Ivoire, a national child labour survey is being conducted by IPEC-SIMPOC on all types of child labour.
In Kenya the Central Bureau of Statistics carried out an Integrated Household Survey with a labour module that included children as young as five years.
The Government of Guinea is undertaking a baseline survey on child labour with assist- ance from IPEC-Dakar.
The Uganda Bureau of Statistics included a child labour module in the ongoing Uganda National Household Survey (2005-06) and in the planned Uganda Demographic and Health Survey (2006-07).
In Mexico, a study on child domestic work has been conducted in the Federal District using the Rapid Assessment methodology.
In El Salvador, the Ministry of Education included in its 2006 Enrolment Census ques- tions regarding hazardous child labour to be applied to all public and private, primary and secondary schools in the country.
In the Ukraine, a rapid assessment survey in six sectors of the informal economy is being carried out in two pilot regions of Donetsk and Kherson. Findings of this survey will be used to build a knowledge base on existent forms of child labour and for policy formu- lation on the possible ways to improve the situation of working children.
In Moldova, trade unions initiated surveys on domestic child labour in the areas of Ung- heni and Singerei.
E. Operational Outcome 1a.2 Sub-Indicator 1a.2(i) E: CLM
The following member States are among those that have made progress in the establishment of credible and comprehensive child labour moni- toring and reporting systems.
In the Dominican Republic, a child labour monitoring system is operating in Azua and San José de Ocoa, with the assistance of the local health centres, extension staff of the Ministry of Agriculture and local labour inspectors.
In East Java, Indonesia, a CLMS has been put in place to monitor and prevent the entry of children into localities where there is prostitution.
The district based multi-sectoral integrated CLMS in Ghana with linkages to the existing central system in the Employment Informa- tion Bureau of the Ministry of Manpower, Youth and Employment has been designed and validated by national stakeholders.
Trade unions and employers organizations in Turkey have concentrated their efforts on children working in industry, street trades and in seasonal agriculture work. They have set up a child labour bureau in Adana through which information on working chil- dren in the industrial sectors they represent is collected. This information has been used to design policies to offer better training oppor- tunities to apprentices, remove children from vocations unsuitable for their capacity, and direct child workers to formal education where possible.
ANNEX II.2 CONSTITUENTS USE