The Citizen (Gauteng)

UK, NZ failing on kids’ rights

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Britain and New Zealand are failing on children’s rights, scoring lower than war-torn Syria and North Korea relative to their wealth in rankings released yesterday by a children’s group. “Appalling” discrimina­tion against migrant children and a lack of legal protection for poorer youths in New Zealand and the United Kingdom put them near the bottom of the annual survey by Dutch NGO KidsRights.

“It’s a shame that countries like the UK and New Zealand are really at the lowest ranks of this index,” said Marc Dulleart, founder and chairman of KidsRights.

Britain ranked 170 and New Zealand 169 in the survey of 181 countries.

Iceland was top, followed by Portugal, Switzerlan­d, Finland and Germany. Afghanista­n was worst, followed by Sierra Leone, Chad, Equatorial Guinea and the Central African Republic.

The annual KidsRights rankings, compiled with the Erasmus School of Economics in Rotterdam, use United Nations (UN) data to check how countries

measure up to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.

“Of course the situation in the UK is far better than in Afghanista­n or Syria, but it’s relative to their position,” Dulleart said.

“The message is that, considerin­g their economic status and it is a democracy and it is a country not in war, then it is appalling in such a rich developed country that the score on the basic principles of the Convention on the Rights of the Child is the lowest score.”

Booming economic growth in countries such as China, India and Myanmar is, meanwhile, failing to translate into better rights for children, the group said.

However Thailand and Tunisia ranked surprising­ly highly, at 14th and 15th, because with the “limited resources they have, they put everything into the next generation”, said Dullaert.

The group said giving children around the world a bigger say was crucial.

It cited the examples of youth movements such as teen climate activist Greta Thunberg’s school marches and US rallies for gun control after school shootings.

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