State of Children’s Rights Getting Worse

1 min read

Children’s Day turns into a rallying cry: young voices demand basic rights

KARACHI:

On a day meant for joy, children traded festivities for protests as they fought for their fundamental rights. On the occasion of Universal Children’s Day, future leaders from different school clubs in Benazirabad urged the district and provincial governments to invest funds and take extraordinary steps to protect the right to life, survival, health, and education in the province especially in tribal areas where schools and health facilities and services do not exist; thus, children become part of tribal gangs, which fuels the tribal warfare.

The Hari Welfare Association (HWA) organised a seminar to mark the day, where hundreds of children from different child rights clubs and schools gathered and raised their challenges through different forms of art; tableaus, speeches and paintings.

Children including Sakeena, Zahra, Yashfa, Amna Jabbar, Hamza, Fiza and Paras revealed alarming statistics on education and child welfare in the province. They shared that an estimated 100,000 children are directly and indirectly engaged in tribal conflicts.

Even people who are adults now have spent all their childhood in tribal disputes without education.

They said these children in tribal districts especially in riverine areas have bleak futures. They only learn to take revenge and engage in unlawful activities and create the worst law and order situations in the region.

The innocent generation demanded the provincial government more funds for building schools in rural areas, appointing of female teachers, initiating rigorous monitoring and taking measures to restore peace in tribal districts. They also requested for children’s and women’s immunisation scales to be spread to rural areas, and special services should be started to support malnourished children. They also urged the government to expand child protection mechanisms at the tehsil level to protect children’s future.

President HWA Akram Ali Khaskheli said that according to a report, 6.4 million out-of-school children in Sindh, were deprived of their right to education due to poverty, lack of nearby schools, government disinterest, awareness, and corporal punishment. Despite an increase in the Sindh Education and Literacy Department’s budget, the number of schools decreased.

The HWA noted a reduction in schools from 49,211 in 2006-07 to 42,383 in 2016-17, with a substantial decline in girls’ schools.

The HWA estimated over 1.7 million bonded labourers in Sindh, including over 700,000 children.

News published in the Express Tribune on 21st November 2024

Previous Story

Punjab Jails To Have Daycare Centres

Next Story

Shehbaz Vows To Eradicate Polio

Latest from Blog

Karachi Emerges As Top Polio Exporter

ISLAMABAD: On October 9, Health officials warned that Karachi has surpassed southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa as Pakistan’s most potent source of exported poliovirus, urging parents to protect their children from lifelong paralysis by participating in the imminent vaccination drive. “Karachi is the most potent exporter of poliovirus in the country and…

Polio Worker Killed In Armed Attack in Karachi

KARACHI: A polio worker was killed in a suspected targeted attack on the Superhighway on October 9. Site Superhighway Industrial Area SHO Wilayat Shah told Dawn that Rehmanullah, 30, was on his way to Surjani Town on a motorcycle when unknown suspect(s) opened fire near Jamia-tur Rasheed. He sustained critical bullet wounds…

Govt Declares Water Emergency in Gwadar

QUETTA/GWADAR: The Balochistan government has declared a water emergency in Gwadar and suspended all taxes related to water supply to resolve the issue of serious water shortage the coastal district. A decision to this effect was taken after a massive protest demonstration was staged by residents of Gwadar. The water…

Woman Held From School After Failed Kidnap Bid

SARGODHA: A woman was arrested from a school for allegedly trying to kidnap two students and spraying poisonous gas on the children and teachers present in the school. According to the complaint filed by Sheikhanwala Primary School, in Bhakkar’s Darya Khan tehsil, headmistress Sundas Zahra alleged that a woman, later…

FBISE To Share Its Software With Other Boards

ISLAMABAD: Secretary of the Ministry of Federal Education and Professional Training Nadeem Mahbub asked the Federal Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education (FBISE) to share its software system with all the provincial Boards and to arrange training sessions for teachers to strengthen assessment practices and capacity at the provincial level.…
Go toTop