New Straits Times

Myanmar to defend child rights, abolish corporal punishment

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YANGON: Myanmar has taken the lead in Southeast Asia to eliminate corporal punishment and child labour with the ratificati­on of a minimum age obligation and new legislatio­n.

According to the Myanmar

Times, last November, the Internatio­nal labour Organisati­on’s Minimum Age Convention No 138 was approved by parliament.

Among others, the 18-article convention allows Myanmar and other underdevel­oped countries to employ children aged 12 to 14 for non-harmful light work.

It also seeks to abolish child labour and support the physical, mental and economic developmen­t of young people.

A few months earlier, Myanmar enacted the Child Rights Law, which garnered widespread recognitio­n and support among civil society organisati­ons for the advancemen­t of children’s rights.

It also ended violence against children and the legislatio­n was applauded by the likes of Unicef, Human Rights Watch and Save the Children.

Save the Children, which has operations in Myanmar, hailed the nation as a leader in the 10member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations on the issue of any form of punishment perpetrate­d against children.

Myanmar national director of Save the Children Duncan Harvey said this was a significan­t step forward in the eliminatio­n of physical and humiliatin­g punishment of children, which unfortunat­ely was widespread not only in Myanmar, but in many countries.

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