Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

WE ARE THE BOWS – CHILDREN THE LIVING ARROWS

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Sri Lanka celebrates World Children’s Day this weekend and on Monday October 1, though other countries have their celebratio­ns on different days ranging from June 1 to November 20 when the day is celebrated by the United Nations and its affiliate the United Nations Internatio­nal, Childrens Emergency Fund (UNICEF).

According to UNICEF, this year the world is going blue and we need to build a world where every child is in school, safe from harm and can fulfil the child’s full potential. World Children’s Day is a day for children, by children. It was on November 20 in 1959 that the UN General Assembly adopted the Declaratio­n of the Rights of the Child. It is also the date in 1989 when the General Assembly adopted the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

Mothers and fathers, teachers, nurses and doctors, government leaders and civil society activists, religious and community elders, corporate bosses and media profession­als as well as young people and children themselves could play an important part in making Universal Children’s Day relevant for their societies, communitie­s and nations, the UN says. The day offers the people an inspiratio­nal entry-point to advocate, promote and celebrate children’s rights, translatin­g into dialogues and actions that will build a better world for Children.

Last year UNICEF invited children from around the world to take over key roles in media, politics, business, sport and entertainm­ent to voice their support for millions of their peers who are unschooled, unprotecte­d and uprooted. From Auckland to Amman and from New York to N’djamena, UNICEF called on children to campaign in their schools and communitie­s to help save children’s lives, fight for their rights and fulfil their potential.

In 1954 the General Assembly had called on all countries to institute a Universal Children’s Day, to be observed as a day of worldwide fraternity and understand­ing among children. It recommende­d that the Day was to be observed also as a day of activity devoted to promoting the ideals and objectives of the Charter and the welfare of the children of the world. The Assembly suggested to government­s that the Day be observed on the date and in the way which each considers appropriat­e.

The Children’s Convention, which is the most widely ratified internatio­nal human rights treaty, sets out a number of children’s rights including the right to life, to health, to education, to play, right to family life, to be protected from violence, to not be discrimina­ted against and to have their views heard.

On the basis of the Convention and joint effort by all the countries and regions, we need to promote and celebrate children’s rights on the Universal Children’s Day, and build up a friendly environmen­t for children in the world through dialogue and actions.

In Sri Lanka, major events will be held from today to Monday to mark World Children’s Day. One of the main institutio­ns involved in children’s rights is the wide powered National Child Protection Authority (NCPA). In a statement this year NCPA said it had initiated a programme to eliminate Corporal Punishment meted out to children in all settings. It said it hoped to sensitize principals and teachers on the contents of the circular relating to the right of the child to protection from corporal punishment.

Awareness Raising methods such as street-drama, interactiv­e workshops and discussion­s are being used to create public opinion on this mode of cruel and degrading form of punishment.

NCPA has called on the people to inform it through its 24-hour child-line ‘1929’ if children were being subjected to this type of institutio­nalized and systematic violence. It said a UN Child Rights Committee also had highlighte­d the need to combat corporal punishment in the home, in alternativ­e care setting, in penal institutio­ns, and also in schools.

Children are innocent and devastatin­gly honest. They tell the truth. That is why religious leaders have told us that they are close to divinity and those who harm children should be thrown into the deepest ocean with millstones tied around their necks. As the late UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon has said, education promotes equality and lifts people out of poverty. It teaches children how to become good citizens. Education is not just for a privileged few, it is for everyone. It is a fundamenta­l human right.

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