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CPS
adopts rights-based approach in its programming
Lainet
Mawire, Child Protection Society (CPS)
Extracted from the Child Advocate Newsletter, Issue No. 3
December 2003
Child
Protection Society (CPS) has reaffirmed its role as a national child
rights advocacy organisation by reorienting its programmes to specifically
target the fulfilment of the rights of children. Over the past two
years, CPS has deliberately shifted from the needs- based approach
to a human rights-based approach and development in all its programming.
According
to Doreen Mukwena, Director of CPS, the organisation’s major focus
now is to influence policy and practice by employing strategies
such as advocacy and lobbying, policy dialogue, research and information
dissemination.
She
said CPS has realised that there is a need to raise awareness and
create an ethos of respect for the rights of the child in Zimbabwe
in order to meet the child’s basic developmental rights. Through
advocacy, Mukwena, believes that the concept of childhood in Zimbabwe
should be redefined to adopt views that empower children as rights
holders.
The
human rights-based approach to programming now guides the implementation
of all CPS’ programmes in matters of child protection, birth registration
and orphans and other children made vulnerable by HIV and AIDS.
The organisation has moved away from just being a welfare organisation
in keeping with the realisation that the development of a child
should not be considered as a simple matter of charity but a right.
Simon
Mwanza of SAHRIT affirms the rights based approach as a tool which
development organisations, institutions and governments can effectively
use to address interests of various target groups particularly children.
There is a clear distinction between charity on one hand, and rights
on the other. When child development is described as a right it
means that the child holds a claim or a legal entitlement and all
carers from families, communities and state are bound by a corresponding
duty or legal obligation.
CPS
views children from the human rights approach which recognises that
the child is a citizen with rights. The opinion of a child must
therefore always be taken into consideration in all matters affecting
the child. Respecting the views of the child is an empowering process.
Monica
Gwitira, Child Protection Officer with UNICEF believes that the
strength in the approach is that it places people at the centre
of development. "It gives room to communities and children
to come up with affective, acceptable, friendly and lasting development
strategies," she said.
The rights-based
approach does not place the obligation on duty bearers only but
most importantly emphasises the responsibilities of the children
as rights holders to play a pivotal role in determining their destiny,
said Mukwena. Whereas it is the obligation of the Zimbabwean government
to provide adequate health facilities, it is the communities and
the children that have the responsibility to see that these facilities
are fully utilised.
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Protection Society fact
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