The three-year programme (2015-2017) will work with families in over 100 tea-gardens and 350 villages across Dibrugarh, Sivasagar and Tinsukia districts to empower and safeguard young people.
It will provide life-skill training and education to nearly 25,000 girls and 10,000 community members to protect themselves against abuse and exploitation, besides strengthening child protection systems with local and national government and empower the tea industry to support positive change, said Dr Tushar Rane, Chief of Field Office UNICEF Assam.
The project supported by Assam Government is to be the first of its kind as it brings together key stakeholders in the tea industry - both public and private organisations - and the supply chain to tackle child abuse and exploitation across the tea-sector.
Also supported by the Assam Branch of India Tea Association (ABITA) and the Bharatiya Cha Parishad (BCP), the partnership was launched by Assam State Commission for Protection of Child Rights (ASCPCR) Chairperson Runumi Gogoi with a one-day symposium on promotion of child rights in the tea-estates of Assam.