The girl from Herat

Published November 12, 2014
Afghan child Fatima, 8, (L) sits next to her disabled father Ab Zahir at their rented home in Herat.
Afghan child Fatima, 8, (L) sits next to her disabled father Ab Zahir at their rented home in Herat.
Afghan child Fatima, 8, (L) pushes her disabled father Ab Zahir on a tricycle near their home in Herat.
Afghan child Fatima, 8, (L) pushes her disabled father Ab Zahir on a tricycle near their home in Herat.
Afghan child Fatima, 8, (C) fills up her ice cream cart as she prepares to head out into the streets of Herat to sell the pops.
Afghan child Fatima, 8, (C) fills up her ice cream cart as she prepares to head out into the streets of Herat to sell the pops.
Afghan child Fatima, 8, pushes her ice cream cart along the streets of Herat.
Afghan child Fatima, 8, pushes her ice cream cart along the streets of Herat.
Afghan child Fatima, 8, counts the money she earned from selling ice-cream along the streets of Herat.
Afghan child Fatima, 8, counts the money she earned from selling ice-cream along the streets of Herat.
Afghan child Fatima ,8, and her sisters pick at a dish of vegetables at their home in Herat.
Afghan child Fatima ,8, and her sisters pick at a dish of vegetables at their home in Herat.
Afghan child Fatima, 8, (R) applies cream to her disabled father, Ab Zahir's legs as she helps him fit his braces at their two-room rented house in western Herat.
Afghan child Fatima, 8, (R) applies cream to her disabled father, Ab Zahir's legs as she helps him fit his braces at their two-room rented house in western Herat.

Afghan child Fatima, 8, works from 7:00 am to 4:00 pm, starting her long day by picking up boxes of ice cream from a wholesaler and then pushing her cart along the rough and uneven streets of the city.

“My only and biggest dream is to have some money, so that I don't need to work anymore and can go to school and study just like other girls,” Fatima told AFP.

“When I'm selling ice cream in front of this school and see other girls go inside, laughing and happy, I really wish I could go too."

Child labour is common in Afghanistan, with 17 per cent of all girls aged between 7 and 14 either working outside the home or doing full-time household chores, according to Unicef. — AFP/Aref Karimi

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