| THE NGO NETWORK ALLIANCE PROJECT - an online community for Zimbabwean activists | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Betty Makoni from Zimbabwe could be Decade Child Rights Hero for 22 million
children 22 million children in 50,000 schools in 94 countries are behind the World's Children's Prize for the Rights of the Child (WCPRC), 750,000 of them in Zimbabwe. This year the prize will be awarded for the tenth time. The 13 prize candidates include Betty Makoni from Zimbabwe, Nelson Mandela, murdered carpet factory slave Iqbal Masih and saviour of child sex slaves Somaly Mam. Millions of children will participate in this year's Global Vote to decide who will be the Decade Child Rights Hero. On the 20th anniversary of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, 20 November, the children will reveal their chosen prize laureate. Since the year 2000, the World's Children's Prize has awarded children's prestigious prizes for outstanding efforts for the rights of the child. The prize money has contributed to giving tens of thousands of the world's most vulnerable children a better life. So far, 27 prize laureates have received prizes and have become role models for children all over the world. Thirteen of these are candidates in the children's next Global Vote, which will determine their Decade Child Rights Hero. (see list below). World's largest rights-based educational programme The WCPRC is the world's largest educational programme for young people on the rights of the child, democracy, the environment and global friendship. The WCRPC programme empowers children, giving them hope for the future and the chance to demand respect for their rights. It is carried out in cooperation with more than 50,000 teachers, as well as almost 500 organisations, departments of education and youth media projects. Millions of vulnerable children participate Millions of children learn about their rights and democracy through the World's Children's Prize. They include former child soldiers, debt slaves and street children. Children who have lost their parents to AIDS, genocide or in the Asian tsunami, and children who live in dictatorships, have also found out about their rights through the World's Children's Prize. The prize magazine, The Globe, and the website, www.worldschildrensprize.org, is produced in 11 languages, including Arabic and Farsi (Persian). The magazine is smuggled into villages in Burma and is read by former child soldiers in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, like 15-year-old Furaha: "When I was twelve years old and a soldier, all I knew was death, violence and war. Now I have participated in the World's Children's Prize and in the Global Vote for our rights. Before I read The Globe I had no idea that we children had the right to protection and a good life." Furaha was one of the 6.6 million children who took part in the Global Vote in 2008. Mandela and the Queen of Sweden The patrons of the World's Children's Prize include Nelson Mandela, Queen Silvia of Sweden, Nobel Prize laureates José Ramos Horta and Joseph Stiglitz, former Executive Director of Unicef Carol Bellamy, former UN Under-Secretary-General Olara Otunnu, and supermodel and refugee Alek Wek. The World's Children's Prize is supported by Sida (the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency), Save the Children Sweden, the Swedish Postcode Lottery, the Surve Family Foundation, Radiohjälpen, Altor, AstraZeneca, eWork, Banco Fonder and the Folke Bernadotte Academy. In June 2008, the
World's Children's Prize was called 'the most important
communication initiative on the planet' by the International Association
of Business Communicators, with 16,000 members in 65 countries. The 13 candidates for Decade Child Rights Hero Iqbal Masih,
Pakistan (posthumously) Asfaw Yemiru,
Ethiopia Nkosi Johnson,
South Africa (posthumously) Maiti Nepal Maggy Barankitse,
Burundi James Aguer,
Sudan Prateep Ungsongtham
Hata, Thailand Dunga Mothers,
Kenya Nelson Mandela,
South Africa and Graça Machel, Mozambique Craig Kielburger,
Canada AOCM, Rwanda Betty Makoni,
Zimbabwe Somaly Mam,
Cambodia Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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