
CHILD RIGHTS
EU opportunity to boost children’s
rights
“The world has become a scary place for children” with
millions of them falling prey to trafficking, exploitation and abuse,
and the expansion of the European Union (EU) offers an opportunity to
enhance their rights, the head of the United Nations Children’s Fund
(UNICEF) said today. “In Europe and Central Asia, millions of children
are falling through the cracks to be trafficked and traded, exploited
and abused, excluded and alienated in ways that affront the
intelligence, shame the conscience and break the heart,” UNICEF
Executive Director Carol Bellamy told government ministers from across
Europe and Central Asia.
“We know how to prevent this from happening, so what
exactly is holding us back?” she asked the representatives from more
than 50 countries and delegations of young people, donors and civil
society gathered in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, for the Second
Intergovernmental Conference on Making Europe and Central Asia Fit for
Children. “EU expansion has generated a new sense of optimism and opened
minds across the whole of this region to issues of human rights, an
opportunity we should seize to deliver on child rights obligations under
the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child,” Ms. Bellamy added.
Hosted by the governments of Bosnia and Herzegovina
and of Germany, the three-day conference will focus on five areas for
priority action: investing in children; children moving across borders;
violence against children; social exclusion and cities fit for children.
The conference will also identify and prioritize measures for action at
country level to end child trafficking and illegal adoptions, violence
in the home, the school and the community, and exclusion from
participation in the mainstream of life. “We must create a protective
environment for and with children,” Ms. Bellamy said. “We must ensure
that the cracks that exist now are plugged with sound, inclusive
policies and legislation; with a social service system that is
accessible and friendly to all children irrespective of gender,
ethnicity, religion or culture; and with a supportive family and
community environment.
“It is not beyond our means or reach, for example, to
make this the first region to eliminate child poverty,” she added. “What
we need right now is more political will and leadership.”
http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/WO0405/S00158.htm
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