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Political
commitment should be expressed in committing sufficient resources
to children
Doreen
Mukwena, Child Protection Society (CPS)
Extracted from the Child Advocate Newsletter, Issue No. 3
December 2003
Economic
planning and budgeting is already underway for the year 2004. Children
are often excluded as nonentities in such exercises. Economics is
usually regarded as a child blind profession that demands a reduction
in the dependency ratio through shrinking the population of children.
Family planning programmes have been vigorously implemented vigorously
in Zimbabwe but children continue to represent around 30% of the
entire population which is estimated at 5 779 000 million. Of the
total of 5 million children, 1.2 million are orphans, having lost
both or one parent. 780 000 of these children have been orphaned
due to HIV/AIDS.
In
an environment where the working population between 15 -49 years
old is quickly shrinking because of HIV and AIDS, development of
future human capital should be prioritised in this current planning
process. This human resource -- a key to economic success and growth
-- is represented by the 5 million children who should undergo processing
in the human resource development cycle. But where are they are
now? A total of 3 400 967* children are reported to be in 6 328
schools all over the country
With
the unemployment rate estimated at 70% most young people are wasting
away in redundancy and frustration at home. A total of 12 000 of
them are languishing on the streets. Captains of industry and economists
drive past them daily, seeming not to notice this resource or threat
that can either make or break an economy.
From
a schools survey for budget recommendations from school children,
conducted by CPS this year, key priorities were identified. Some
of them are as follows:
- Free compulsory
primary education must be provided for al children. Failure to
go to school by children or denial by parents should become a
punishable offence.
- The Basic
Education Assistance Module should be expanded to also provide
school uniforms and other educational support for children in
difficult circumstances
- Birth registration
should be a budget priority to facilitate decentralisation and
mobile registration
- Access to
meaningful health care for children should be a budget priority
as evidenced by availability of drugs and the existence of a child
focal person to receive unaccompanied children seeking medical
attention
- Access to
anti-retroviral should be guided by a policy that ensures equity
- The construction
of boreholes and Blair toilets should be a budget priority to
ensure access to clean water and sanitation
- There should
be a budget provision for programmes targeted at children living
on the streets
Children view
the budget from their own perspective. And it is interesting to
note that the budget priorities as defined by school children are
designed to ensure their survival and development. Their recommendations
can only be ignored at the nation’s peril.
It
would also improve access to resources by children if children’s
issues were placed under one Ministry with a comprehensive budget
allocation for children. Presently issues of child welfare are fragmented
among the Ministries of Health and Child Welfare, Public Service
and Welfare and that of Education and Culture. This is not a signal
that children are a priority in budget considerations, yet national
wisdom should be reflected in its ensuring continuity through children.
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