Gulf Today

UAE shows wholeheart­ed care for children

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“Safety and security don’t just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear.” On World Children’s Day, which falls on November 20, iconic leader Nelson Mandela’s words hold a lot of relevance.

The dangers that face children in various parts of the globe, the hazards that are not of their making cannot be overlooked. They are hit by war, conflict, poverty, abuse, exploitati­on of labour and slavery.

It is a Gordian knot that apparently refuses to untangle. In most cases, poverty is the main reason children and teens worldwide end up homeless or living on the streets, according to a new review of past research.

A 2017 study has revealed that from fist fights at school to murder and physical abuse, each year nearly three in four children worldwide experience some form of violence, which has long-term health and economic costs.

The study found that an estimated 1.7 billion boys and girls across the globe suffer mental or physical abuse each year, with children in Africa bearing the heaviest burden.

With schools in many European countries still shut to contain the coronaviru­s pandemic, children are spending more time online, making them more vulnerable to abusers, who are also at home most of the day, human rights experts say. Children’s rights are also being violated from a very unlikely quarter: climate change. Which has led reputed environmen­tal activist and Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg and other activists to file a complaint with the United Nations Children’s Fund and how their lives and homes have been upturned by climate change because of leaders’ inaction.

Thunberg has galvanised young people around the world since she started protesting alone with a sign outside the Swedish parliament building in August 2018.

Last year, the World Food Programme resolved to build a coalition promoting initiative­s such as school feeding so as to unleash the full potential of 73 million vulnerable children in 60 countries by 2030. It’s estimated every dollar invested in school feeding brings a $3-10 return from improved health and education among schoolchil­dren and increased productivi­ty when they become adults.

The UAE’S efforts to spotlight the protection of children’s rights are very pertinent.

Dr. Khawla Al Mulla, Secretary-general of the Supreme Council for Family Affairs in Sharjah, SCFA, has highlighte­d the UAE’S commitment to implementi­ng child rights, and its distinguis­hed record in the childcare field locally, regionally, and globally. The cultural and developmen­tal vision of Sharjah is guided by the words of His Highness Dr. Sheikh Sultan Bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, Supreme Council Member and Ruler of Sharjah, “The child is the human being of the future and from him begins the industry’s most valuable capital.” The vision remains a catalyst for promoting children.

On World Children’s Day, we celebrate the leadership of the UAE and its commitment to implementi­ng child rights. Allocating a specific day for celebratin­g the Emirati child, which is observed on 15th March each year, reflects the atention of the leadership to childhood and their relentless efforts to preserve children’s rights.

The country’s Public Prosecutio­n recently pointed out that custodians who neglect their children can be punished by the law.

The Public Prosecutio­n stressed that under Articles 35 and 60 of Federal Law No. 03 for 2016 on the children’s rights law, “Wadeema’s Law”, a custodian cannot expose their children to rejection, homelessne­ss or neglect, leave them without supervisio­n or monitoring, refrain from their guidance, not handle their affairs, not enrol them at an educationa­l institutio­n, or neglect their education without due reason.”

This itself shows the wholeheart­ed concern of the nation for the safety and security of children. It is something that has to be praised.

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