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Uphold the interests and rights of children: President PDF Print E-mail
Saturday, 16 June 2012 22:20
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Uphold the interests and rights of children: President
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Emilia Zindi

President Mugabe has called on society to uphold the interests and rights of children living with disability, saying efforts should be made to uplift their lives.

Speaking at the 20th Session of the Children’s Parliament of Zimbabwe in Harare yesterday, he said such children were capable of making significant achievements.

He said the theme for this year’s Day of the African Child commemorations, bade all Zimbabweans to uphold the interests of children with disability.

The event, which coincided with the commemorations, ran under the theme, “The Rights of Children with Disability: the Duty to Protect, Respect, Promote and Fulfil’’.

Some of the children often feel unwanted and disrespected owing to discrimination at home, said the President.

“Subjected to an environment like that, a child learns to expect no better from society for he or she expects nothing else but ill-treatment,’’ he said.

“They are made to accept that they are unable to do anything, which is far from being the truth. Indeed, disability is not inability.’’

Cde Mugabe said the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child recognised the human rights of all children, including those with disability.

Zimbabwe ratified the convention in 1990.

Article 23 states that State parties should recognise that a mentally or physically challenged child should enjoy a full and decent life in conditions which ensure dignity, promote self-reliance and facilitate the child’s active participation in the community.

Article 13 of the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child also states: “Every child who is mentally or physically disabled shall have the right to special measures of protection in keeping with physical and moral needs and under conditions which ensure his dignity, promote his self-reliance and active participation in the community.’’

President Mugabe said it was, therefore, the responsibility of society to help children with disability. He noted that although certain disabilities were natural, others were human induced.

“If only through our actions and words we can give them an assurance that they are indeed worthy persons, such children can excel to heights unimaginable,’’ he said.

“Let us, therefore, not help perpetuate a feeling of self doubt in these children because by doing so we would only be imposing real disability unto them.’’

He added that leaders and authorities in the developing world should protect their citizens and promote human posterity. He said Government efforts to uplift the lives of children living with disabilities continue to suffer retrogression because of greedy caregivers who divert funds to personal use.

He castigated bogus charitable organisations, which sourced funds and donations for pilferage. Parents of the children, he added, should obtain birth certificates for them for easy access of funds. He also said registration of citizens enabled them to be accounted for in Government planning.

“Far less children with disabilities have either national identity documents or birth certificates. As a result, those without cannot be enrolled in our schools,’’ he said.


 

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