Sat. Jul 6th, 2024
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Nabila works 10 hours or more a day, doing the heavy, dirty labour of packing mud into moulds and hauling wheelbarrows full of bricks.

At 12 years old, she’s been working in brick factories half her life now, and she’s probably the oldest of all her co-workers.

Already high, the number of children put to work in Afghanistan is growing, fuelled by the collapse of the economy after the Taliban took over the country and the world cut off financial aid just over a year ago.

three children work near a pile in a dusty brick factory in afghanistan
Conditions in brick factories are tough for adults, let alone children. (AP: Ebrahim Noroozi)

A recent survey by Save the Children estimated that half of Afghanistan’s families have put children to work to keep food on the table as livelihoods crumbled.

Nowhere is it clearer than in the many brick factories on the highway north out of the capital, Kabul. Conditions in the furnaces are tough even for adults.

But in almost all of them, children as young as four or five labour alongside their families from early in the morning until dark in the heat of summer.

a young girl empties a wheelbarrow of bricks as a person rides a horse and cart behind her
The children toil carrying dried bricks for firing. (AP: Ebrahim Noroozi)

Children do every step of the brickmaking process. They haul canisters of water, carry the wooden brick moulds full of mud to put in the sun to dry.

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