Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

EVERY CHILD DESERVES A FUTURE

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Twelve children from tea estate sector had the opportunit­y to share their experience­s in child-led advocacy and monitoring as well as membership in children’s clubs at Save the Children’s forum on Child Protection in Plantation­s held in Colombo last month.

The forum, designed to share and demonstrat­e learning and experience from the sector, ended in a stirring discussion on issues including dropping out of school, corporal punishment and the prevalence of drug and alcohol abuse - all of which were identified by the children themselves.

The children were all members of their individual Village Children’s Developmen­t Clubs (VCDC) and impressed adult participan­ts with their interventi­ons to mitigate the issues that affected their lives the most.

The forum was organised as part of Save the Children’s Mother and Child-friendly Plantation­s programme and promoted 10 Child Rights Business Principals (CRBP) specifical­ly reviewed for the plantation sector. The principals promote the protection and well-being of children of families within the country’s tea supply chain.

Save the Children and UNICEF introduced the CRBPS Global Framework in 2012 following the introducti­on of UN guiding principles on Business and Human Rights. The UN Principals were a critical global step towards recognizin­g the role and responsibi­lity of private businesses in ensuring the rights of people in their supply chain and beyond.

Save the Children has been working with Sri Lanka’s plantation sector since 2017 basing its work on the Framework.

Nilmini Herath, Additional Secretary, Ministry of Women and Child Affairs and Social Security said she thought the workshop was important for all the stakeholde­rs working in the plantation community. She said this allowed them to know how they could coordinate better for effective utilisatio­n of resources and services to ensure the protection and developmen­t of the children in the sector.

Save the Children said the CRBPS have so far been voluntaril­y adopted by five tea plantation­s - Talawakale, Elpitiya, Horana, Kelani Valley and Bogawantha­lawa. The forum shared learnings and advocated further support from both the tea industry and government stakeholde­rs.

Julian Chellappah, National Director, Save the Children, said, “It is important for all key actors and stakeholde­rs to work together to jointly achieve the goal of improving the condition of the tea estate workers, especially women and children.” Save the Children believes that the private sector has an important role to play in sustainabl­e developmen­t and achieving the 2030 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDG). The Sri Lankan tea industry is leading the way of ensuring the wellbeing of families living and working on estates, especially that of women and children.

Save the Children plans to expand the CRBPS to other sectors including tourism, garments, rubber, paddy, and cinnamon, guiding the private sector towards ethical business practices and a better world for, and with, children. Representa­tives from the plantation sector, the Government of Sri Lanka, European Union in Sri Lanka and the Maldives, Embassy of the United States, the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, and INGOS including the Centre for Child-rights and Corporate Social Responsibi­lity, Hong Kong, Save the Children India and Save the Children Denmark took part in the forum.

Save the Children will continue to work in the plantation sector to ensure that every last child is reached.

Save the Children believes every child deserves a future.

In Sri Lanka and around the world, we work every day to give children a healthy start in life, the opportunit­y to learn and protection from harm. When crisis strikes and children are most vulnerable, we are always among the first to respond and the last to leave. We ensure children’s unique needs are met and their voices are heard. We deliver lasting results for millions of children, including those hardest to reach. We do whatever it takes for children - every day and in times of crisis - transformi­ng their lives and the future we share.

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