Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

The six severe threats affecting our children

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1. Nutrition is a fundamenta­l building block of a child’s life and the cornerston­e of each child’s developmen­t as a healthy and productive adult.

Yet, Sri Lanka is one of the ten worst lowermiddl­e-income countries in the world for childhood wasting.

Sri Lanka ranks below its neighbours in Nepal, Bangladesh and even Afghanista­n. 15.1 percent of Sri Lankan children under age five suffer from wasting. One in six children experience­s stunting and severe malnutriti­on.

2. Sri Lankan students spend more time in school than any other country in South Asia.

Yet 11 percent of students drop out between grades 5 and 9. Some 80,000 students fail O/L exams while another 70,250 students fail their A/L exams.

70 percent of employers do not believe that the general education system produces young adults with the skills that they need to succeed in the modern workplace. Sri Lanka invests less than 2 percent of its GDP annually on education, lower than most middle-income countries.

3. Despite lifting millions of people from the clutches of extreme poverty, varying poverty levels from across the country limit the opportunit­ies for millions of our children. In 16 out of 25 Sri Lankan districts, child poverty rates are higher than overall poverty rates. People in rural areas are twice as likely to be poor as opposed to those in urban areas, rising to five times in the estate sector.

4. Indisputab­le scientific evidence shows that corporal punishment is extremely damaging to the developmen­t of children who suffered from it and also to children who witnessed such punishment. Yet corporal punishment is still common and legal in homes, schools and communitie­s across the country. A study in

Galle, Polonnaruw­a, Batticaloa and Colombo districts revealed that 74 percent of the parents use some form of corporal punishment. 80.4 percent of schoolchil­dren have experience­d at least one episode of corporal within the last 10-12 weeks in 2017, according to the National Child Protection Authority.

5. Peace and cohesion are integral to a prosperous and stable country. Yet schools continue to be segregated along ethnic and religious lines 91.8 percent of schools offer instructio­n only in Sinhala (62.2%) or Tamil (29.6%). The majority of the children does not learn a second national language although or English as a link language.

Education can be used so much more effectivel­y to promote peace and build the national Sri Lankan identity.

6. Sri Lanka is ranked the second most vulnerable country in the world to the effects of Climate Change. Yet 30 percent of the population suffers the most from the direct impact of extreme weather which impacts their health, education, future life prospects.

According to the UNICEF representa­tive, anecdotal evidence exists, that the last major drought particular­ly across the dry zones, has caused an uptick in child marriage, simply because families cannot afford to feed their female children. The 2016/17 droughts were the worst in 40 years, reducing the national agricultur­al output by 53 percent. Preparing communitie­s to be more resilient is a critical challenge for the children of the island.

Making your vote count for every child Six million children of Sri Lanka cannot vote. But you can make a difference by visiting the website dedicated to this campaign www.arawade.lk.

The website allows you to ask all 35 presidenti­al candidates via an online letter, to commit to resolve these issues faced by the future generation of Sri Lanka if they are elected to the highest office of the country.

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