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Children to address Parliament on violence

Published:Sunday | November 17, 2019 | 12:19 AM
Children put their recommendations for actions to address violence against children on a vision tree, during a September 26 town hall event in Montego Bay, St James. organised by UNICEF in collaboration with the Office of the Children’s Advocate and Talk Up Yout.
Children put their recommendations for actions to address violence against children on a vision tree, during a September 26 town hall event in Montego Bay, St James. organised by UNICEF in collaboration with the Office of the Children’s Advocate and Talk Up Yout.

For the first time in Jamaican history, children will address Parliament in a special session looking at violence against children on Tuesday.

The special session has been organised by UNICEF Jamaica, in collaboration with the Office of the Children’s Advocate (OCA) and the Ministry of Education, Youth and Information.

Also speaking will be Mariko Kagoshima, head of UNICEF Jamaica, Children’s Advocate Diahann Gordon Harrison, and Dr Howard Taylor, executive director of the Global Partnership to End Violence against Children.

The special session is being held on the eve of World Children’s Day and marks the culmination of activities led by UNICEF throughout 2019 to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC30) – with a focus on violence against children.

In a statement, UNICEF and the OCA said that they were deeply and increasingly concerned about the alarming scope and harmful impact of violence against Jamaican children in all settings, including the prevalence of sexual violence and corporal punishment.

The main CRC30 activity was a series of town hall events that engaged children to gain insights on their experiences with violence and their own ideas for actions that the Government of Jamaica can take to address violence against children.

UNICEF staged these events from August-October in collaboration with the Child Protection and Family Services Agency (CPFSA), the OCA and Talk Up Yout. Close to 300 children ages 6-17 were engaged in Kingston, St James and Clarendon.

“Violence is taking a heartbreaking toll on Jamaican children,” said Kagoshima. “At the town halls we learned that too many children are experiencing physical, emotional and sexual violence at the hands of family members and people they trust. Too many are witnessing violence affecting their family or being bullied. And too many are scared to report acts of violence.”

The special session on violence against children is intended to call for urgent action by the Government to implement the National Plan of Action for an Integrated Response to Children and Violence 2018-2023.

The NPACV was tabled in Parliament earlier in 2019 and will be launched on November 19, after the special session.

For her part, Gordon Harrison stated: “It is indeed quite encouraging that the National Plan of Action for an Integrated Response to Violence against Children will be launched at such a critical time in Jamaica. Our children will undoubtedly stand to benefit positively from this ‘all of Government approach’ that is fully focused on prioritising strategies that promote meaningful responses to all forms of violence which continue to negatively impact children.”

Jamaica is a designated pathfinding country under the Global Partnership to End Violence against Children, which obligates the country to take accelerated action to reduce and prevent violence against children.

Jamaica’s commitments are outlined in the recently updated NPACV. Its implementation will be guided by a National Commission on the Prevention of Violence, which was appointed by Prime Minister Andrew Holness earlier this year.