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El trabajo infantil en el mundo

El trabajo infantil en el mundo

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  • Trabajo infantil en Argentina

    Five-year-old Kiara sells goods to commuters in a train car in Buenos Aires, the capital. She has been working in the Subte, the city's mass transit system, selling hairpins and other cheap goods, since she was three years old. Five members of Kiara's family work in the Subte; they give the money to her grandmother. A year ago, Kiara broke her arm when it was caught in a train door. She has also fallen onto the train tracks while playing. [#2 IN SEQUENCE OF NINE]
  • Trabajo infantil en Estados Unidos

     

  • Trabajo infantil en Haití

    Image UNI100369: © UNICEF/NYHQ2010-2610/LeMoyne A boy shines a woman’s shoes in Pétionville, a municipality of Port-au-Prince, the capital.In early December 2010 in Haiti, as the one-year anniversary of the 12 January earthquake approaches, over a million people – including 380,000 children – remain displaced and highly vulnerable. The disaster, which killed 220,000 people, has been further compounded by seasonal storms and by an ongoing cholera outbreak that has killed over 2,300 people and sickened more than 100,000. Recovery efforts continue to face bottlenecks and barriers, many of them related to limited infrastructure and deep-seated poverty. Still, UNICEF and partners have reached millions with vital services, and are laying the groundwork for long-term rebuilding. A UNICEF-led cluster of relief agencies has reached 1.7 million people with safe water and sanitation. Working with partners, UNICEF helped immunize over 1.9 million children against seven diseases; enabled 720,000 children to return to school; identified and registered nearly 5,000 unaccompanied children; and reunited 1,265 unaccompanied children with their families. UNICEF also supports: therapeutic feeding centres treating more than 11,

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