It’s easy to overlook. After all, millions of
children in Kenya attend school, and the assumption that the child labor crisis
is under control persists. But if you take a closer look, you will realize that
some of those same children will leave class and head to building sites. Others
will rise before dawn to sell goods on the roadside, or spend weekends helping
parents in quarries, or gold mines. Worse still, more remain invisible as they
are kept at home to care for younger siblings or elderly guardians. They are
sidelined from both education and childhood.
The Reality That Stays with
Us
At the Loyola Centre for Media and
Communications, LCMC, our projects often take us along this same highway from
Nairobi to Eldoret. On one of those trips, we stopped to buy sugarcane from a
boy by the roadside. Our manager, Joy Kesenwa, asked why he wasn’t in school.
His answer was simple: “I have been sent home since I have a huge fee balance.”
Weeks later, on another trip, we saw him again.
This time, he said he was home since schools were closed. They weren’t. His
mother was nearby, and let’s just say, the look she gave us could have roasted
the sugarcane. On the third trip, we passed the very spot. He was gone. Whether
he had returned to school or was hidden away after being recognized, we may
never know. But what we do know is that his story is not unique. It’s repeated,
reshaped, and ignored across the country every day.
In Northern Kenya, where we also run children-centered
projects, retrogressive culture denies kids the chance to study and play. In
some communities, going to school is considered foolish, while herding
livestock is seen as a sign of intelligence. “You’re smart,” they say, “if you
bring the cows and goats home safely. Not if you sit in a classroom.”
In Nairobi, while promoting our campaign on the
Child Labor Vs. the Right to Play Project, we were told outright, “If you want
these kids to play, give them an alternative to making money.”
The Hidden Cost of
Survival
In Kenya, child labor is not just about
exploitation. It’s about survival. Data from the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics
(KNBS) shows that 8.5 percent of children, or 1.3 million
children are engaged in child labor with many working under hazardous
conditions that put their health and safety at risk. For many of these
households, children are viewed not only as dependents but as contributors to
the family. School and play become luxuries in a world where food is uncertain.
Article 53 of Kenya’s Constitution guarantees free
basic education for every child. This is reflected in the Education Act, which
ensures that schools have the support, resources, and leadership they need to
offer free education to all children. However, a research from UNICEF 2022
indicates secondary school enrolment nationwide sits at just over 50%.
Additionally, 2.5 million children aged 4-17 have never been to school, which is
in part attributed to hidden costs. Even when school is technically
"free," hidden costs like uniforms, books, lunch, and exams make it
unaffordable. As a result, many children and parents don’t see education as a path
out of poverty, but as another burden. As a result, they turn to work that
brings immediate returns.
This year’s Day of the African Child theme,
“Planning and Budgeting for Children's Rights”, hits at the heart of the
matter. Until we address the poverty that fuels child labor, the problem will
remain. Children will continue to choose maize over math, hard labor over
homework, not because they want to, but because they have to.
What is our national budget for child protection
beyond the printed figures? What is our survival plan when a child is forced to
become the breadwinner? Since 2010, how much progress have me made? How far
have we really come?
Budgeting for Paper or
People?
While policy conversations around children’s
rights grow louder, the implementation, especially in budgeting for practical
support, still lags. If survival options are not available to struggling
families, how can we expect children to stay in school and play, let alone
thrive?
LCMC believes that child labor is not an
isolated issue. It is a symptom of larger structural failures. One of the most
overlooked yet effective solutions is Decent work for adults.
When parents earn a proper living, children can
stay in school. When families have access to social protection, children are
freed from the burden of contributing to household income. When we invest in
communities, we give children a real shot at being just that. Children. Try to
imagine how your childhood would have been if you were subjected to labor, and
never had the chance to play and learn.
At LCMC, we’re on the frontline of this fight.
Through our Value-Based Education program, we use artivism (performing arts for
advocacy) to teach children their rights, empower their voices, and inspire
social change. We're working with schools and communities to challenge harmful
norms, share stories safely, and campaign for solutions.
But advocacy alone is not enough. It’s time for budgeting that is child-centered, survival-conscious, and results-driven. It’s time for investment not just in promises, but in people. In playgrounds. In protection. In the possibility that every child deserves a life beyond labor. Because no child should have to choose between school and work.
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