Bangkok Post

3.2m kids at ‘high risk’, govt told

- DUMRONGKIA­T MALA

Over 3.17 million children in Thailand are in dire need of direct care, interventi­on and support from the government, a local academic warned yesterday.

Education expert Sompong Jitradup said this “high-risk” group include school dropouts, abandoned kids, street children, child offenders, unwed mothers, young drug addicts, stateless children with no legal rights, children with learning problems, children with disabiliti­es and those facing severe poverty.

“These children are feeling neglected and discrimina­ted against by society. Some are even excluded from fundamenta­l services and protection. Without timely interventi­on, their anger and alienation could push them into dangerous or anti-social behaviour,” he said. Mr Sompong made the remarks at the “Little Voices of Neglected Children” seminar organised by the Thai Health Promotion Foundation, Chulalongk­orn University, the Quality Learning Foundation (QLF) and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).

He said 1.7 million Thai kids have learning problems such as autism or attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder (ADHD), 476,647 are living in severe poverty, 200,000-300,000 are stateless, 138,000 are abandoned or living on the streets, 104,289 are teen mothers, 33,121 are child offenders and 25,000 have been forced into commercial sex.

“I’ve heard drug cartels in the North are now opening schools for stateless children to teach them how to deliver illegal drugs,” Mr Sompong said. “These kids often can’t get access to higher education or highpaying jobs due to their legal status.”

Mr Sompong also read a statement in front of Social Developmen­t and Human Security Minister Pol Gen Adul Sangsingke­o suggesting the ministry take five steps to improve the situation. First, he suggested it develop a database of vulnerable children together with the Ministry of Interior and local administra­tive organisati­ons nationwide.

He also advised the ministry to share its data and personnel with NGOs and the private sector to form a “social protection system”. His third demand was for the government to unlock some restrictio­ns for stateless children and allow them to access higher education, fundamenta­l services and basic legal protection.

Pol Gen Adul’s ministry should also allocate more money to NGOs and provide vocational training courses that align with market demand, Mr Sompong said. Finally, he suggested the ministry create more opportunit­ies for vulnerable children to express their opinions.

Pol Gen Adul said the suggestion­s would be incorporat­ed into the ministry’s developmen­t plan. He vowed no children would be left behind.

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