I would say that child labour exists in all regions in all countries. The numbers are particularly bad in the global south, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, where we've seen the highest rates of child labour. About 20% of all children in sub-Saharan Africa are in child labour. Elsewhere, the rates are lower. Globally, it's a little bit less than 10% of all children who are in child labour.
The ILO conventions talk about different forms of child labour. There are worse forms of child labour, and those include, I think, what you're referring to in terms of forced labour, work in extremely hazardous conditions with pesticides or toxic substances, and then there's just child labour for which the child is too young. An eight- or nine-year-old at work also falls under our definition of child labour, and it interferes with schooling, so it has big repercussions for societies and for the future labour force.