Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

‘Never give up on a

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‘It takes a village to raise a child’ - the African proverb has become famous because it holds true universall­y. Children need a loving environmen­t to thrive and face many difficulti­es when their needs are not met. Such ‘at risk’ children do indeed need a village – or at least a few concerned individual­s to help them grow up happily.

It is this principle which has driven SOS Children’s Villages Internatio­nal to provide a virtual village for many children in need of support. SOS Children’s Villages worldwide offer children without a suitable guardian alternativ­e care and the organisati­on aims to help any and all children in need through their projects.

In tune with these ideas as well as their internatio­nal theme ‘No Child Should Grow Up Alone’, the SOS Children’s Villages Sri Lanka launched their latest advocacy initiative ‘Never Give Up on a Child’, on July 7 at the Water’s Edge, Battaramul­la. Nearly 100 guests representi­ng the state, civil society, the corporate sector and the media were present at the event which also celebrated the 35th anniversar­y of the SOS Children’s Village Sri Lanka.

National Director, SOS Children’s Villages Sri Lanka, Ananda B. Karunarath­ne explained that SOS doesn’t merely help children within the villages but also through their various initiative­s. He felt that this initiative could help many with the support of the relevant parties. The Never Give Up on a Child initiative aims to engage with all stakeholde­rs in ensuring that all children are well cared for.

SOS Children’s Village Sri Lanka National Adviser and Advocate ChathuriJa­yasooriya explained that the main goal of the initiative is for stakeholde­rs to invest in the rights of the child without allowing bureaucrac­y to get in the way. Asking guests to close their eyes and picture a happy childhood memory, she said that this is what all stakeholde­rs must think of when making decisions for children. “The reason we let bureaucrac­y get in the way is because we are distant from our emotions and don’t realise how much our decisions affect these children,” she said.

A video testimonia­l from a youth whose identity was not revealed was played to show how much bureaucrac­y impedes the developmen­t of institutio­nalised children. “For everything I did in school – from taking part in sports events to sitting for public examinatio­ns I needed my birth certificat­e. Why can’t the relevant authoritie­s understand that there are people who don’t have a birth certificat­e? In this country in order to have basic rights you need a birth certificat­e,” he said.

The system needs to support these children without failing them, Chathuri stressed.

The initiative has two main goals. Their first is to work with the government to initiate a de-institutio­nalisation mechanism – a system which aims to keep children in families and reunite them with their families following institutio­nalisation as much as possible. The second goal of the programme is to raise awareness among the public.

SOS Children’s Villages Sri Lanka has initiated a pilot project in the Uva Province in collaborat­ion with the Provincial Department of Probation and Child Care Services as a part of this first aim of supporting the government initiate the de-institutio­nalisation process. The organisati­on has been providing technical support to the Uva Province in order for the state to reintegrat­e institutio­nalised children back into their homes as soon as possible (or provide adequate alternativ­e care) and for them to meet the physical and human resources necessary to improve the standard of both government and privately-run orphanages in the area and lobby with the relevant authoritie­s.

Provincial Commission­er for the Department of Probation and Child Care Services - Uva Province, Mrs. O.W.C.S. Priyabashi­nie felt that this initiative was supporting the officials in her province to help children in need. In her presentati­on highlighti­ng the issues faced in her province, she identified the main issues which affect the children – such as mothers leaving to the Middle East to work and unsafe housing structures. She felt that there was more which could be done to help the children and stated that there is action being taken to help them. SOS Children’s Villages Sri Lanka hopes that this pilot project will succeed in order for the project to be implemente­d in other provinces as well.

Their second aim of raising awareness to the plight of ‘at risk’ children has begun with the opening of a ‘talking

 ??  ?? SOS National Director, Ananda B. Karunarath­ne
SOS National Director, Ananda B. Karunarath­ne

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