By Mariyah Adamu,Abuja
Federal government has called on the International Labour Organisation, ILO, Nigeria Employers Consultative Association, NECA, organised labour and other stakeholders to redouble efforts to eliminate child labour in Nigeria.
Minister of Labour and Employment, Muhammadu Dingyadi, made the appeal in Abuja on Tuesday during the 2025 World Day Against Child Labour and a Special Children’s Conference.
The conference had as theme; “Progress is clear, but there is more to do: Let us speed up efforts.”
The day is observed globally every June 12.
Dingyadi noted that a recent ILO, UNICEF report showed a global decline in child labour, from 160 million to 138 million, a positive trend that included Nigeria.
However, he cautioned, “Even one child in child labour is one too many.”
Addressing the children at the conference, he encouraged them to draft a powerful communiqué to influence government policy.
He assured them of the ministry’s support and invoked President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, saying: “Education is the most powerful weapon to break the cycle of poverty and child labour.”
The minister also acknowledged the contributions of ILO, ECOWAS, NECA, NLC, TUC and other ministries, affirming that “together, we are building a legacy of protection and opportunity for our children.”
ILO’s Director for Abuja, Dr Vanessa Phala, highlighted the ongoing challenge, saying millions of Nigerian children remain in unsafe, exploitative and hazardous work in spite of Nigeria being a signatory to international child-labour standards.
She noted the encouraging global decline of 22 million child-labourers since 2020 and more than 100 million since 2000, even as the child population increased by 230 million in that span.
These figures, she said showed the need for sustained and accelerated action.
Phala called on the National Assembly, Ministry of Labour and Employment and stakeholders to expedite the passage of the reviewed Labour Standards Bill, aligning domestic law with international standards and promoting social justice.





