Jamaica Gleaner

UNICEF to continue to fight for children.

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AT UNICEF Jamaica, we are a small team dedicated to one big goal: to fulfil the rights of every Jamaican child. Most of our staff members are Jamaicans. We are all very dishearten­ed when any child is harmed or has their rights violated in any way. We are committed to preventing this as much as we can. None of UNICEF’s work is possible without our partners. We work closely with a range of government and non-government­al partners, providing both technical and financial support for various efforts in the areas of safety and justice, lifelong learning, health promotion and social protection.

2018 HIGHLIGHTS

UNICEF published the Situation Analysis of Jamaican Children, which provides a sweeping overview of major challenges and opportunit­ies in the areas of protection, health, education, social protection and the environmen­t. One of the most urgent and unsettling issues covered in the report is the persistent­ly high levels of violence against children.

We shared preliminar­y findings of a comprehens­ive UNICEF-supported study about Jamaican children in state care, which examines how and why children are placed in state care and the quality of care provided. The groundbrea­king study is being conducted by Jamaicans for Justice, in consultati­on with the Child Protection and Family Services Agency (CPFSA) and the Office of the Children’s Advocate (OCA). The ultimate aim of the research is to make the case for the deinstitut­ionalisati­on of children.

300 YOUTH TRAINED

Through our partnershi­p with the Peace Management Initiative (PMI), we facilitate­d the participat­ion of 300 youth ages 15 to 19, who were at high risk of getting involved with gangs and violence in gang demobilisa­tion, life skills and behaviour change workshops. One hundred and twenty of them were referred to various job and training opportunit­ies, steering them away from an otherwise dangerous path.

We also worked closely with the PMI, Fight for Peace and the Ministry of Health’s Bounce

Back programme to train community residents and resource persons to deliver services in psychologi­cal first aid – an approach that helps children, adults and families in the immediate aftermath of a violent or traumatic incident, helping them to reduce initial distress and with coping in the short and long term.

We supported the OCA in training more than 90 police officers, of various ranks, to implement the child justice guidelines – which outline standards for how profession­als throughout the justice system should interact with children who come into contact/conflict with the law – in ways that respect their rights and dignity. More officers will be trained in the near future.

Over the last five years, more than 120 children have died on the roads due to accidents. Through a collaborat­ive effort with UNICEF and the FIA and Abert is Foundation­s, the Jamaica National Foundation launched a national road safety campaign ‘X Marks the Spot’. The initiative is based on the findings of a national assessment and will make infrastruc­tural improvemen­ts outside of 18 schools in high road injury risk areas over the next three years.

We continued training school personnel in the School Wide Positive Behaviour Interventi­on and Support (SWPBIS) framework – a major effort to reduce violence and promote positive values that has been piloted in 56 schools in partnershi­p with the Ministry of Education, Youth and Informatio­n. Over 5,000 educators have been exposed to the methodolog­y and 2,500 trained.

We continued to expand our work for children with disabiliti­es. With our support, Special Olympics Jamaica completed the ‘There is an I Can in every Jamaican’ outreach expansion project, which increased its number of clinical volunteers to over 100, screened close to 1,000 children, promoted and supported the growth of unified sports and provided much-needed equipment to facilitate health screenings outside of the Kingston and Metropolit­an area.

We supported the Digicel Foundation and the Jamaica Council for Persons with Disabiliti­es to increase the number of children with disabiliti­es who are officially registered, to help ensure they have access to key services. Together, we developed a comprehens­ive Situation Analysis on Persons with Disabiliti­es and a media campaign to promote inclusion and empowermen­t. Both will be launched during Disabiliti­es Awareness Week in December.

Through our work with the Ministry of Health, an additional 21 health facilities (now a total of 38 facilities) are implementi­ng adolescent health standards to improve service delivery and uptake in services among adolescent girls and boys.

We continued to expand our work for children with disabiliti­es. With our support, Special Olympics Jamaica completed the ‘There is an I Can in every Jamaican’ outreach expansion project, which increased its number of clinical volunteers to over 100, screened close to 1,000 children, promoted and supported the growth of unified sports and provided much-needed equipment to facilitate health screening.

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 ?? FILE ?? State Minister for Education, Youth and Informatio­n Floyd Green takes a selfie with United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Jamaica Representa­tive Mark Connolly (second left) and students from Norman Manley High School following the launch of the UNICEF free social-messaging tool, U-Report, at The Knutsford Court Hotel in New Kingston in May.
FILE State Minister for Education, Youth and Informatio­n Floyd Green takes a selfie with United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Jamaica Representa­tive Mark Connolly (second left) and students from Norman Manley High School following the launch of the UNICEF free social-messaging tool, U-Report, at The Knutsford Court Hotel in New Kingston in May.

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