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CHILD PARTICIPATION IN PRACTICE: VOICE OF THE YOUNG-A MODEL

CHILD PARTICIPATION IN PRACTICE: VOICE OF THE YOUNG-A MODEL. BY: BAKARY Y. BADJIE PROGRAMME OFFICER-CHILD PARTICIPATION CHILD PROTECTION ALLIANCE THE GAMBIA. CPA: HISTORICAL BACKGROUND . Formed in The Gambia on 26th April 2001

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CHILD PARTICIPATION IN PRACTICE: VOICE OF THE YOUNG-A MODEL

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  1. CHILD PARTICIPATION IN PRACTICE: VOICE OF THE YOUNG-A MODEL BY: BAKARY Y. BADJIE PROGRAMME OFFICER-CHILD PARTICIPATION CHILD PROTECTION ALLIANCE THE GAMBIA

  2. CPA: HISTORICAL BACKGROUND • Formed in The Gambia on 26th April 2001 • Formation was instigated by the absence of a civil society consortium on child rights and child protection in The Gambia • Current membership stands at 48 organizations

  3. VOICE OF THE YOUNG-WHAT IS IT? • Established in 2002 • Serves as the mouthpiece of children • Present in the Greater Banjul Area and in Junior and Senior Secondary Schools in Lower River and Central River Regions of The Gambia • Comprises boys and girls under the age of 18 years-from all social backgrounds: majority of the members are girls

  4. VOICE OF THE YOUNG-WHAT IS IT? • Voice of the Young is administered by a 14 member Executive Committee (the ‘Core’) with support of Youth Coordinators • Each Voice Club is run by a 7 member Executive Committee and supported by 2 Teacher Coordinators • Develops or Plans and implements its own activities which forms part of the CPA annual Work Plan • Represented by its President in the CPA Board of Directors

  5. OBJECTIVES • Raise awareness and increase knowledge of children on issues of child rights • Empower children with the life skills • Enhance the meaningful and active participation of children in decision-making at all levels • Develop in children a sense of responsibility, civic consciousness and Discipline

  6. PROMOTING CHILD PARTICIPATION: WHAT ACTIVITIES VOICE ENGAGES IN • Monthly General Membership Meetings (Planning and skills building forum) • Children ‘Bantaba’ (Advocacy platform; adoption of Declarations) • Media Programme (Child panelists and moderators) • Capacity Building Activities for Children

  7. VOICE ACTIVITIES CONT. • Commemoration of Special Days • Advocacy and Lobbying (an established advocacy group within Voice) • School Based Programmes • Community Social Mobilisation • Drama, Quiz and Debate Competitions

  8. A VOICE GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING IN PROGRESS-

  9. VOICE INVOLVEMENT IN LEGAL AND POLICY CHANGES IN THE GAMBIACOMMUNITY CHLD PROTECTION INITIATIVES

  10. CHILDREN SERVING IS DIFFERENT COMMITTEES AND TASK GROUPS • Community Child Protection Committees (mainly in rural areas) • Neighbourhood Watch Groups (in Tourism Development Settlement) • Government Taskforces: Preparation of Gambia’s reports on children, validation of research reports etc. • Government delegations to UN and other international meetings /conferences

  11. ADVOCACY FOR A CHILDREN’S ACT: WORKSHOP FOR CHILDREN ON THE CRC AND ADVOCACY TECHNIQUES

  12. INVOLVEMENT OF CHILDREN (VOICE OF THE YOUNG GROUP) IN THE LEGAL REFORM PROCESS • Engaged and encouraged the participation of policy makers, parents, religious leaders and politicians in the legal reform exercise • Held meetings with the Vice President and First Lady of The Gambia to garner support for the reform process • Organised workshops, radio and television programmes on the UN CRC and existing laws in The Gambia (to show anomalies) • Converged on the National Assembly in large numbers on the day the Bill was tabled for adoption

  13. RAISING AWARENESS: VOICE MEDIA PROGRAMME

  14. VOICE BANTABA IN MARCH 2005

  15. 2005 BANTABA DECLARATION CALLING FOR THE ENACTMENT OF THE CHILDREN’S ACT

  16. CHILDREN’S ACT 2005 OF THE GAMBIA

  17. 2007 BANTABA

  18. OUTCOME OF THE DECLARATION: PRESIDENTIAL DIRECTIVE

  19. MAKE-IT-SAFE CAMPAIGN: APRIL 2009-DECEMBER 2010

  20. KEY OUTCOME

  21. VOICE ADVOCACY GROUP • Membership of Seven (7) children from the Executive and general members supported by the 2 Youth Coordinators • Embarked on Advocacy Meetings through courtesy call on key government official, heads of NGOs UN agencies and Security

  22. ADVOCATING FOR CHILD-FRIENDLY BUDGETING

  23. KEY OUTCOMES Kanifing Municipal and Brikama Area Councils increased the allocation of their Municipality’s budget to children’s welfare: mainly in the areas of education (scholarship), water and sanitation, birth registration, child protection and play and recreation. In 2011: Budget increment for Department of Social Welfare

  24. 2009 REGIONAL CHILDREN’S BANTABA

  25. VOICE CLUB OF BRIKAMA BA

  26. SOME SUCCESSES OF THE VOICE CLUBS • All 12 schools with Voice Clubs prohibited Corporal and other humiliating and degrading punishment for students • Appointment of designated teachers as focal points for child abuse reporting in all schools with Voice Clubs • Have increase awareness on child rights and child protection for locals in villages where the schools are base

  27. SOME SUCCESSES OF THE VOICE CLUBS • Reduces incidences of teenage pregnancy involving students and drop of school / increase enrolment of children in school • Built the life skills of their members and other children in the these schools • Contributed to the reduction of cases of defilement, sexual harassment and other child abuse cases in the communities

  28. 2010 REGIONAL BANTABA

  29. NEWSPAPER CAPTIONS: DEMANDS OF CHILDREN

  30. IMPACT AND SUCCESSES OF INITIATIVES • Greater acceptance of child rights • Children with high sense of esteem and skills in public speaking, and presentation and advocacy skills • Empowered children who are able to stand up and speak out when their rights are ignored or neglected • Voice a ‘leader’ in child participation • Prohibition of corporal punishment in schools with Voice Clubs • Sexual harassment Reporting Procedures for School with Clubs

  31. CHILDREN’S LIFE SKILLS CAMP

  32. CHALLENGES • ‘Child rights’ still regarded as Eurocentric and anti-Islam • Culture of silence around child sexual abuse • FGM/C and child marriage sensitive and vexed political questions • No Ministry for children

  33. LESSONS LEARNED (1) • Children are their own better advocates when they are provided the necessary tools and guidance. • Policy makers tend to appreciate, respect and value the views of children on child protection issues and are spur to action on these pleas (adult advocates are often accused of being on the pay roll of the West NGOs) .

  34. LESSONS LEARNED (2) 3. Effective public information campaigns on child rights are essential catalysts for change when they accompanied by policy-oriented advocacy strategies. 4. A strong capacity for mobilisation and continuous dialogue and engagement with various stakeholders are needed to ensure acceptance of the child’s right to participate

  35. LESSONS LEARNED (3) 5. Facilitating children’s access to the media makes its possible for many more people to hear what children truly think and allows them to express their opinions fully and in detail. 6. The people’s confidence is won when a culturally sensitive issue such as child participation is framed in a culturally appropriate context.

  36. LESSONS LEARNED (4) 7. Social change is a slow and agonizing process that cannot be hurried if it is to be long-lasting. 8.Law reform is an important prerequisite for policy change but it is not sufficient to guarantee children’s rights.

  37. Special Thanks Save the Children Sweden Regional Office for West Africa

  38. THANK YOU

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