Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Students Initiate Forum On Child Rights In Gyumri, Armenia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Students Initiate Forum On Child Rights In Gyumri, Armenia

    Students initiate forum on child rights in Gyumri, Armenia

    World Vision Middle East/Eastern Europe office (MEERO)
    Reuters AlertNet, UK
    June 12 2008

    Senior students from World Vision's Area Development Programme (ADP)
    communities across Gyumri, Armenia recently initiated a forum on
    child rights around International Children's Day.

    The forum, which took place in secondary school #11 in Ani Community
    of Gyumri, the second largest city of Armenia, addressed child rights
    in the context of overall human rights.

    Thirty-five students from different schools in the region, many of them
    members of active student groups, were involved in panel discussions
    on basic rights, which they had previously identified and studied.

    'For every one of us it is very important to know our rights, no matter
    if you are a child or an adult. My friends and I are eager to learn
    more about what rights we have, just as we know our responsibilities',
    said 16-year-old Susanna Gasparyan, who studies in the 10th grade in
    secondary school #11 of Gyumri.

    Three guest specialists from the Human Rights Protection Foundation
    after Sakharov (a famous human rights activist) facilitated the
    forum. First they sought to gauge the level of the students' knowledge
    of human rights in general and child rights in particular.

    A game called 'Island of Rights' followed, where participants were
    divided into teams and had to solve situational problems such as,
    'the first day of regular school for a child with special needs',
    'lack of proper sanitary conditions in schools', 'children involved
    in farming work, etc., through the 'application' of relevant rights.

    'It is amazing that students are eager to learn about human rights
    and particularly child rights. They criticise child abuse cases such
    as severely hitting children as a way of upbringing and suggest that
    those cases should be prevented through awareness raising campaigns',
    said Gayane Margaryan, one of the Human Rights Specialists.

    The game was followed by another discussion, comparing these discussed
    rights with those included in the Armenian legislation, such as the
    right to health and education, free speech and religion, etc.

    Young participants expressed their opinions on the programmes
    implemented by World Vision Armenia's Gyumri ADP. 'We recognise and
    appreciate what World Vision has implemented in our region so far:
    renovated schools, helped children from poor families, established
    child centres, and much, much more', said Susanna.

    The students also suggested programmes that they would like the ADP
    to implement in their communities in the future: reconstruction of
    schools and tree-planting, improving the teachers' qualification,
    organising youth activities, assigning psychologists in schools and
    replenishing school laboratories with new equipment, etc.

    World Vision's ADP teams will use the valuable feedback and information
    from the students in the planning of its programmes for the coming
    five years.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X