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Day
of the African child: the unending plight of African children
UN Millennium Campaign
June 16, 2009
Africa observes the Day
of the African Child, in memory of, thousands of black school children
who were maimed and killed in 1976 Soweto uprising, as they took
to the streets to protest the inferior quality of their education
and to demand their right to be taught in their own language.
To honour the memory
of those killed and to meet the Millennium Development Goals relating
to the welfare and safety of African children, the UN Millennium
Campaign Calls on African states, Civil Society Organizations and
the private sector to tackle child and maternal mortality, school
dropout, gender inequality in UPE and poor quality standards of
UPE.
As many as 50,000 African
children under the age of 5 years will be losing their lives as
a result of preventable or curable diseases. And children as many
as 38 million of primary school age in Africa will still remain
out of school.
"Child survival,
protection and development are not only universal aspirations enshrined
in the MDGs, they are also human rights issues ratified in the International
Convention on the Rights of Children and the African charter on
the rights and welfare of the child" Says the UN Millennium
Campaign Communications Coordinator and Acting Deputy Director for
Africa, Ms. Sylvia Mwichuli.
"Investing in the
health and education of African children and their mothers is a
sound economic decision and one of the surest ways for a country
to secure its future. Reducing child mortality and ensuring Universal
Primary Education, requires strong political commitment."
She quipped.
From Sierra Leone to
Ethiopia, Angola to Mozambique, an average of more than 1 in every
4 children die before the age of five. In Liberia, Mali, Chad, Equatorial
Guinea, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Burkina Faso, the figure
is more than one in every five children.
Even Africa's biggest
and most developed countries scores of children die before their
fifth birthdays: in Nigeria 191 of every 1,000 children die by the
age of five, in Botswana it is 124 and in Kenya it is 121.
To compound the situation
further, while official reports indicate that Children are now better
off than they were ten years ago and can look forward to living
beyond the age of 5, their mothers still die while bearing them
consequently denying them parental care.
Whether it's the
mother or her baby that dies-life shouldn't be lost in avoidable
circumstances: no mother wants to produce a child for death to grab
nor any baby would wish to grow up an orphan, or come to life at
the expense of the mother's life.
An African child who
lives beyond his/her fifth birth day and make it into school going
age; hunger, disease, discrimination and inadequate facilities deny
her/him a chance to enroll and stay in school.
Although official reports-
like the UN Millennium Development Goals 2008 report shows that
there is widespread progress in primary school enrollment, user
fees, such as uniform, stationary and meals, armed conflict, lack
of birth registration, child labour and HIV/AIDS still keep around
38 million African children of primary school age out of school.
The conditions are more devastating for girls, the higher they climb
the ladder of education the wider the rate of dropout.
According to the UN Millennium
Campaign, Policy Associate, Thomas Deve, "To ensure that more
vulnerable and marginalized are enrolled and remain in school, targeted
programs and interventions aimed at poor households such as setting
up satellite schools in remote areas, eliminating school fees, providing
school meals, constructing separate sanitation facilities, ensuring
a safe school environment and promoting later marriage must be designed
and implemented across countries that lag behind on these MDGs targets."
Time and again, it has
been proven that when political commitment is present, the results
are often significant. Countries like Rwanda, Malawi, Zambia, Uganda,
Kenya and Ghana are good cases. Malawi for example has moved from
a hungry country that it has always been to a regional food supplier
in recent years. It is also only second to Costa Rica globally in
reducing child mortality by more than 1/3 in the past three years!
Zambia has made great
strides in HIV testing, prevention, and education after president
Mwanawasa declared a national emergency in 2004. By the end of the
year, he had surpassed his goal of providing 10,000 citizens with
antiretroviral treatment (ART). The government has also focused
on integrating HIV/AIDS education into the public school curriculum.
When it seemed impossible
for pastoral communities in Kenya to access education, the government
designed mobile classrooms in which the children of the nomads access
education as they wander about in search of water and pasture for
their cattle.
In all of these cases
the reason for success has been the country's political will.
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