Child Labour Panjgur
A relatively better economic status of families in the district, mainly due to good income from employment in Gulf states, has limited the number of children working as labourers. A very small number of children were found working in some of the automobile workshops. They were working as apprentices and were supposed to open their own workshops after completion of training. Some of the working children were in bakeries, bicycle repair shops, black smith shops, hotels, engineering workshops, hair cutting saloons, tailoring shops, tunnoors (loaf makers), and welding works. In most of the cases children were working as apprentices and were paid a little amount as stipend.

A little shopkeeper
In the localities far from settled villages, where water is not available in the house, children are supposed to fetch water and sometimes to collect fuel wood. In the livestock farming communities, they herd cattle and help in cattle raising. All these tasks are performed by children and considered as a help to their families; not as child labour.
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