Cabinet clears Family Court

The government will be proceeding with a special Family Court, Human Services Minister Priya Manickchand said on Wednesday.

According to Manickchand, the decision was made at Tuesday’s meeting of Cabinet.
The court will come under the jurisdiction of the High Court and will deal with all family-related disputes.  The Minister said that when considering several of the new laws that the government intends to institute, it was decided that the legal system will be better  served if it had its own court that dealt specifically with family matters.  It is the Minister’s opinion that the establishment of the court will also speed up the legal proceedings in family matters which often drag on for years.

Manickchand, however, was unable to say how soon this court would be set up. She explained that some time may be needed to get infrastructural aspects settled as well as to adequately train the staff. The Minister said that although ideally the court should be housed in a separate building, the main aim at present is to get the Court functioning as quickly as possible.

The minister made the announcement at the launching of a new dormitory for the Joshua House.

Source:https://www.stabroeknews.com/2008/news/stories/10/24/cabinet-clears-family-court/

 
 

Legal Aid centre launched in Berbice

“Thanks to the democratic revolution of 1992, we have a legal aid system,” former director of the Georgetown Legal Aid Clinic Miles Fitzpatrick said at the recent launch of the ‘Guyana Legal Aid Clinic’ in Berbice.

According to a Government Information Agency (GINA) press release Fitzpatrick, Minister of Human Services and Social Security Priya Manickchand and Region Six Chairman Zulfikar Mustapha addressed an audience at the Regional Democratic Council Compound in New Amsterdam for the opening.

 

Fitzpatrick said that years ago, legal aid clinics “did not have the support of the government of the day.” He continued that the PNC government “was extremely sensitive about this institution that was started by independent lawyers” and had claimed at the time that no third world country could finance the legal aid system. However, he said, “You do the best with what you have. If your resources are small, you start small and you help as many people as you can in the best way that you can….”

Meanwhile Manickchand said in 2006 the current administration had committed to expanding legal services throughout the country. “I’m happy to say that we have legal aid service in Regions Two, Three, Four, Five, Six and Ten,” she said, adding that the only role the administration plays in the legal system is to provide funding and ensure that the services are provided to everyone. The minister said too, “Legal aid is supposed to give you a doorway into the court system and that is why we are very keen on ensuring that legal aid is accessible,” throughout the country.

In addition, Mustapha said over the years the lives of poor and vulnerable persons have improved significantly with the services provided by the ministry. Residents also expressed gratitude for the service, recalling that legal aid services were first offered from 1974 to 1983 but thereafter had ceased. The Georgetown clinic opened in 1994.

 

Source: https://www.stabroeknews.com/2008/news/stories/10/21/legal-aid-centre-launched-in-berbice/

Legal aid comes to Region Five

With the establishment of the Guyana Legal Aid Clinic (GLAC) at Fort Wellington, West Berbice vulnerable persons in Region Five will now have access to free legal services and be able to enjoy their rights in the courts.

Minister of Human Services & Social Security, Priya Manickchand addressing the gathering. Seated in the front row at left is attorney-at-law, Yogini Lochan (behind plant). At a small ceremony held in the compound of the Regional Democratic Council (RDC), Minister of Human Services and Social Services, Priya Manickchand  told the gathering that the clinic is one of the manifestations of the government taking services closer to the people. She said that those who stand to benefit among the vulnerable persons are the poor, the old and children.

 

Ironically while the ceremony was in progress a small group of mostly women and children who said they represented the poor stood outside the compound picketing the minister.

They were displaying placards some of which read, “Priya you betray the single parents,” “No money, no Carifesta,” “Priya fulfill your promises or go,” “Priya mothers are starving” and “Stop pretending Priya – Life is hard.”

According to the minister, “We don’t want to see our children out of school; we don’t want to see our children holding placards in their hands… we want to see our children cared for and protected.”

Some of the children displaying placards during the launching of the legal aid clinic at Fort WellingtonShe mentioned too that two thirds of the people who are benefiting from public assistance are children and said that it would be increased by 63% this year and that pensions have been raised by 82%.

The clinic which is located in a section of the bottom flat of the RDC office would be run by a young lawyer, Yogini Lochan. She would be present at the office three days per week and will also serve at all the courts in the region, the minister said.

 

Referring to the clinic which was launched in Region 2 earlier this month, Manickchand said that 44 persons have already benefited from the service. She said out of those persons eight got advice and two were disqualified because they were thought to have sufficient means.

She added that 11 matters would be instituted in the magistrate’s court, 21 in the high court and four would be dealt with at both courts.
She pointed out that these persons would never have been able to have “legal services, access the court or enjoy their rights” if the government had not provided the funding for the expansion of legal aid services across Guyana.

She said that by the end of August legal aid clinics would be launched in Region 6 and Region 10.
Teni Housty, President of the Guyana Bar Association (GBA) reiterated that the legal aid clinic is one of the critical tools to promote access to justice. He noted that one of the fundamental flaws in the justice system in serving a community is the lack of access to justice.

He urged persons to think of the clinic as a source of information and as an alternative for resolving their disputes. He said that the clinic would assist in several areas including domestic violence and human rights. It would also help persons to gain individual strength and autonomy, he said.

Further, Housty said that the GBA would work with the clinic as a strategic partner, acknowledging that everything cannot be done by one dedicated lawyer. He pledged the support of the lawyers of the GBA.

 

In her address, Josephine Whitehead of the GLAC said that the sole purpose of the clinic is to provide free or subsidized service to persons and that all complaints of the exploitation of the service would be investigated.

Renai Mc Almont, assistant overseer of the Union/Naarstigheid Neighbourhood Democratic Council remarked that the clinic is a “dream come true for women who are battered from time to time or unjustly treated and are unable to afford legal fees.” 

The feature address was delivered by Speaker of the National Assembly and former director of the Board of Directors of the Georgetown Legal Aid Clinic, Ralph Ramkarran. Also giving brief remarks were Chairman of Region 5, Harrinarine Baldeo and Gem Sanford-Johnson, President of the Guyana Association of Women Lawyers. (Shabna Ullah)

 

Source: https://www.stabroeknews.com/2008/news/stories/06/28/legal-aid-comes-to-region-five/

Nurturing child criminals: an indictment of Guyanese society?

It is a familiar sight in many depressed urban communities and increasingly in rural areas as well: idle young men sitting at street corners all day. It is these groups, observers believe, that churn out Guyana’s ever-growing criminal class. Facing hopelessness in a social and political system that offers little opportunity, most start out by begging and eventually graduate – some to petty crime, others to drugs, guns and unspeakable violence. And observers’ views vary only slightly on the path that takes them there.       

 

Is it an indictment on the present administration, as some observers argue, that in the 16 years it has been in office, it has “raised” a number of teen killers? Minister of Human Services and Social Security Priya Manickchand, disagreed. Urging that the plight of teenagers who turned to guns not be politicized, she stated that although some of the criminals today had been born under the present regime their lives had been influenced by what occurred several years before. Manickchand admitted that her ministry may not be able to reach the 14-year-old boy aback of Buxton or Agricola to steer him away from a life of crime, but noted that those closest to such a child should equally share the responsibility of offering him hope. “Child protection is not only about programmes, but children need the right environment, and the politicians and the social workers will all have to work hand in hand to accomplish this,” the minister asserted.   

Manickchand noted that juvenile delinquency was no new phenomenon, adding that her ministry, as well as the Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sport, had been working to address the needs of vulnerable youths, although she acknowledged that some of the programmes were not reaching everyone.  

Sociologists and criminologists say that there is a rise in youth violence globally. In Guyana, most of the crimes today are committed by young men — some still in their 20s. Over the past three years also, scores of teenagers have passed through the courts for their alleged involvement in serious crimes and a number of them have perished during gunfights.

Broken families
Marriage and family life expert, Stanton Adams, was of the view that the extent of teenagers’  involvement in violent crime pointed to a breakdown in the institution of the family. He said the situation was so stark that the question should be asked as to where would we find the next generation of leaders. Adams dismissed the view of some social commentators that poverty was the number one contributing factor to the rise in crime.

 

“People can be poor yet have dignity,” Adams, who is also the executive director of the Guyana Conference of Seventh-Day Adventists, said. The dignity of which he spoke came from the kind of nurturing one got from one’s family, and if the family was failing to carry out its duties then it would only produce delinquents, he continued. Adams argued that poverty could not be totally eradicated, but that values once taught would remain.
Recently, a teenager in Buxton was charged with murdering 11 people at Lusignan. Two other young men — Jermaine ‘Skinny’ Charles and another referred to as ‘Nasty Man’ — are also before the court on a number of murder charges.

Frequently, parents of teens caught up in crime will say that they tried their best, but their children just chose the wrong path. Asked whether he believed this was indeed the case in some instances, Adams said the possibility existed. However, he noted, many parents saw parenting as just producing offspring, when it was also about producing disciplined, mature and self-governing offspring. “Once you have not done this then you have failed. You have not done your best,” Adams said.

Speaking directly to teenagers’ involvement in violent crimes, Adams said males were being neglected in society. Pointing to the many organisations that dealt with empowering women and girls, he noted that none addressed the needs of men and boys. “Nobody sees boys as a vulnerable group and they are left sometimes on their own… so we have some turning to drugs and becoming serial killers.”  Adams further noted that the growing problems among teenage boys were partly due to the absence of father figures in the home. He told Stabroek News that most of the single-parent households in the Caribbean were headed by women. “We need the fathers back in the homes…even if they are not there physically they must be there for their children in their education and other areas,” Adams said. He maintained that a number of the teen killers today would have grown up without even having the opportunity to sit and talk with their fathers. “This is a very serious issue and we need to address it,” Adams said.

Asked what was wrong with a society that produced child killers, Adams said if people could not find anything to be attached to, to give them hope and comfort, they would turn to drugs and crime. “We have people with no sense of significance roaming about our society; they have no role models, in some cases no parents or absentee parents.” It is this group whom drug lords prey on to carry out their nefarious activities, he said.

 

President Bharrat Jagdeo, speaking recently at an event at Babu John, Port Mourant, Berbice weighed in on this topic, telling the young people who were there that they needed to believe in something. “We need to have an ideal,” Jagdeo said, adding that these days he was hearing a lot of talk, but sometimes felt that youths were not committed to an ideal any longer. “When I travel through this country I see people, young people, waiting for the next hundred dollars coming from the States, not wanting to work. The work ethic is gone, [they are] drinking every single day [and] beating up the women,” Jagdeo declared.    

Blame the parents
Speaking on behalf of young people in Buxton, a number of whom had joined criminal gangs, prominent Buxtonian, Deon Abrams, laid some of the blame on parents whom he said were responsible for the lives their children led today.

In an interview with Stabroek News, Abrams revealed that in the initial stage of the criminal uprising in that community, “some parents were accommodating to their sons gravitating to a life of crime.” Coupled with this, he said, was the breakdown of the family unit.

“However,” he said, “there are cases where parents were against their children involving in criminal activities and spoke out, but the result was that they were threatened.” 

 

A teacher by profession, Abrams said that many of the young men caught up in this situation were from a generation which the education system had failed. “Most of them are products of Buxton Community High School. Community schools, over the years, have been dumping grounds for children who need special attention. The fact is that they were not given the sort of attention needed. They passed through without any skills and are now misfits without options,” Abrams said.

Asked whether the elders in Buxton still looked out for children who had strayed, Abrams responded yes, but that it was not like it used to be. “Some of the parents are themselves lacking parenting,” he explained, noting that the many teenage mothers and fathers could hardly take care of themselves, let alone deal with parenting.

Asked what was propelling the violence among youths in his community, Abrams disagreed that the situation existed only in Buxton. He noted that teen criminals today were motivated by money and believed that crime was a means of acquiring money easily. He said many of the young men in Buxton who had turned to a life of crime grew up in a society where they heard of big robberies and also partook of the proceeds of those crimes, since the criminals in the past took back some of the money to the community. “So they grew up seeing money floating around and this would have influenced them,” Abrams said. 

He added that in pursuit of power, some of the young men would have gravitated to crime. “When they have a gun it gives them a certain sense of power that they believe they can never possess.”

 

He went on to say that young men involved in crime were often so emboldened by the possession of a gun, they disrespected their parents and peers. “Once they hold a gun no one can talk to them,” Abrams said. 

Questioned as to what could be done to reverse the tide, Abrams replied that a number of residents had given up speaking to the teenagers bent on committing crimes. He said this was so because the gunmen themselves would issue threats to those they perceived to be in opposition to what they were doing. He noted that at one time in the village, anyone seen not to be in favour of the gunmen became a target and was branded an informant. “So people became fearful to comment on certain things and were careful who they spoke to,” Abrams disclosed.

Freedom fighters 
Abrams said, however, that there was hardly anything Buxtonians could do now to stop the criminals. He said if the state with the armed forces could not deal with them for over seven years now, Buxtonians could not do it either.

There was a pool of people in the initial stage of the criminal uprising in the village, he explained, who thought the escapees could have “brought control to the PPP/C government,” and freed Afro-Guyanese from economic and social oppression. He said this view was strongly entrenched in the psyche of some of the residents, and led to big marches in the community whenever one of the five prison escapees died. After a while, however, the very gunmen who had been hailed as freedom fighters became rebellious. “People became aware that the thing was not working after black people were being killed, and so some villagers shunned the gunmen,” Abrams says.

 

He expressed the view there may be pockets of people who were willing to uphold such a revolution, but their numbers were getting thin.

Asked what was necessary to transform the village, Abrams responded that there needed to be a transformation of Guyana. He reiterated that crime was not just a Buxton problem, although acknowledged that the criminals had made Buxton one of their bases. He said Buxton had been chosen as a criminal base because throughout history the village had always been a militant one and had played an integral part in the struggle during the 1950s and ’60s. “The militant nature of the village would have led many people to see Buxton as their salvation. Even in the protests, people looked to Buxtonians for the stamina, so it is not a surprise that the village was chosen for any kind of revolutionary action,” Abrams asserted.

‘Guns have killed the struggle’
But Buxton had run out of steam lately and residents were not as militant as they were in the past, and this, Abrams said, was because of the emergence of guns. “Guns have killed the struggle,” he said, noting that with guns the prospect of death was very real.

According to Abrams, those who had been involved in the earlier struggles in the village would certainly have seen the difference between what the struggle was then and what it is now. Back then people had been prepared to get on the streets and throw back tear gas at the police. But the emergence of guns had driven a deep fear into them. 

 

Minister Manickchand said her government’s policies to protect children from, not only crime, but other social ills, were sound. However, she said, often citizens were not very receptive and some had not been responding. Manickchand said her ministry had rescued hundreds of youths from the streets, who could have become violent criminals. The minister believed the onus was on all Guyanese to ensure there was a reverse in youth violence, and urged parents to take the lead.

Asked about her ministry’s family and welfare programme, the minister conceded that it was not up to scratch as not enough focus had been placed on this area.

But Abrams felt there was a deliberate effort by the PPP government to shift resources away from black communities and direct them to Indian villages, creating a situation where black youths were deprived of opportunities. Abrams said this had been happening at the level of central government and also at the regional level, and even some projects that were funded by donor agencies were handed out to supporters of the government.

The Buxtonian believed that the policies of the administration were also a contributing factor to the problems faced by many youths, not least in Buxton. “If changes are not made at the national level, Buxton would be repeated over and over again,” Abrams warned.

 

 

 

 

Source: By Nigel Williams; https://www.stabroeknews.com/2008/news/guyana/04/20/nurturing-child-criminals-an-indictment-of-guyanese-society/

Over 50 `Stamp it out’ meetings held

More than fifty “Stamp it out” consultations were held across the country since early November and as it nears the wrap-up date, persons are being urged to still make contributions.

Minister of Human Services and Social Security, Priya Manickchand has expressed satisfaction with the progress of the consultations on sexual violence so far, and plans to host a live television programme early next year before the paper is laid before the National Assembly.

 

“The Government will continue to initiate talks on the prevalent issues in society and we see this as a national conversation where the intervention of everyone is needed”, Manickchand was quoted as saying by the Government Information Agency (GINA).

She further stated that stamping out violence in the society will be a continuing effort of her ministry, adding that this is also part of government’s commitment.

Stamp it out which contains proposals that deal with toughening up of laws against sexual offences and improving protection against sexual violence is expected to be presented in Parliament in the first quarter of 2008.

Consultations which began on November 2 end on December 31 and persons are being encouraged to make contributions by telephone, letters or emails to the ministry.

A massive education campaign will be launched after the new sexual violence bill would have been passed.
 

Source: https://www.stabroeknews.com/2007/features/12/25/over-50-stamp-it-out-meetings-held/

 
 

Over 50 `Stamp it out’ meetings held

More than fifty “Stamp it out” consultations were held across the country since early November and as it nears the wrap-up date, persons are being urged to still make contributions.

Minister of Human Services and Social Security, Priya Manickchand has expressed satisfaction with the progress of the consultations on sexual violence so far, and plans to host a live television programme early next year before the paper is laid before the National Assembly.

 “The Government will continue to initiate talks on the prevalent issues in society and we see this as a national conversation where the intervention of everyone is needed”, Manickchand was quoted as saying by the Government Information Agency (GINA).

She further stated that stamping out violence in the society will be a continuing effort of her ministry, adding that this is also part of government’s commitment.

Stamp it out which contains proposals that deal with toughening up of laws against sexual offences and improving protection against sexual violence is expected to be presented in Parliament in the first quarter of 2008.

Consultations which began on November 2 end on December 31 and persons are being encouraged to make contributions by telephone, letters or emails to the ministry.

A massive education campaign will be launched after the new sexual violence bill would have been passed.

 

 

 

 

Source: https://www.stabroeknews.com/2007/features/12/25/over-50-stamp-it-out-meetings-held/

Manickchand at the UN

Statement by H. E. The Honourable Priya Manickchand, Minister of Human Services and Social Security of the Republic of Guyana, in the Commemorative High-level Plenary Meeting Devoted to the Follow-up to the Outcome of the Special Session on Children

We join with the rest of the international community in offering our heartfelt sympathies to the people and Government of Algeria and, indeed, to all humankind. We have seen yet another attack on humanity.

      We also recognize the statement made by the Honourable Attorney General and Minister of Legal Affairs of the Bahamas on behalf of the Caribbean Community.

      The delegation of the Republic of Guyana, which includes three children, is delighted to participate in this high-level meeting to review the progress of our collective efforts to create a world fit for children. On behalf of the Government and people of Guyana, I extend special greetings to all child representatives and commend them for their invaluable contribution to this year’s review process.

      The care, protection and development of all our children, in whom lies the future of humanity, are objectives that demand pride of place on our national and global agendas. Guyana stands committed to those objectives. We welcome the opportunity to share our experiences in implementation and to exchange ideas on the ongoing process of transforming our world into one fit for children.

      Since the 2002 special session on children, the Government of Guyana has taken several initiatives to enhance the well-being of our country’s children and to ensure that their rights are protected. We have succeeded in reducing child mortality, while increasing the immunization of children against vaccine-preventable diseases; immunization currently stands at 92 per cent. Success has been achieved in preventing mother-to-child transmission of HIV/AIDS, even as efforts have been enhanced in the provision and distribution, free of charge, of locally produced anti-retroviral drugs to those infected with HIV/AIDS. There are ongoing efforts to provide quality education to children in Guyana and, while we have achieved universal primary education, concentration is now focused on the attainment of universal secondary education and ensuring the completion of that grade of education by boys and girls alike.

      The principle of the best interests of the child guides Guyana’s jurisprudence as it relates to legislation on children. To date, we have enshrined in our Constitution the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which provides the framework for promoting healthy lives, combating HIV/AIDS, providing quality education for all and protecting children against abuse, exploitation and violence.

      It is disheartening to note the level of violence in many societies globally. For our part, we have embarked on a campaign to stamp out violence in our society, particularly violence against women and children. That matter is currently the subject of extensive national consultations on the basis of proposals by the Government to reform the law, strengthen protection and improve support and services to victims, while upholding the right of the defendant to a fair trial. Earlier this year, a Child Protection Service was established. The Government of Guyana continues to actively collaborate with UNICEF under the country programme of cooperation 2006-2010 to tackle child protection and welfare issues.

      Implementing a world fit for children has not been without challenges and setbacks, some of which are greater than those occasioned by financial and infrastructural constraints. Children across the world are at risk of further suffering on account of the global increase in food and fuel prices and in the cost of living. With internal and domestic conflicts and wars among countries, the innocence and rights of childhood are stolen. More needs to be done to address the scourge of poverty. More needs to be done to protect children from exposure to conflict situations, as well as to provide for their rehabilitation and reintegration into post-conflict societies.

      Preserving the natural environment for posterity is an important dimension of creating a world fit for children. As reports by the Nobel Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change make clear, human actions are impacting the kind of world our children will inherit. Renowned economist Nicholas Stern has highlighted that those who will suffer most are the developing countries, which have contributed the least to greenhouse gas emissions.

      Vulnerability can be considered in terms of geographic location and economy, as well as age. In the developed and developing countries alike, it is the children who are most vulnerable. Where climate change leads to disasters, destruction and death, children suffer the most. Many become orphans; many become disabled; many become displaced. Their health is affected, their education is affected, and their entire life is turned upside down.

      Global warming and consequent climate change must be addressed. Guyana has taken a leadership role in that effort. Our pristine rainforest does much service to the world in terms of carbon sequestration. The post-Kyoto Protocol framework should make provisions for standing rainforests with mechanisms for rewarding countries for conserving those rainforests.

      From this rostrum, we appeal to world leaders, and indeed all adults, to do everything they can to avoid the road to self-destruction and move our planet onto a path of recovery through massive reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. It will make little sense if we manage to eradicate violence against children on one day and they drown in a mighty flood or starve in a drought or famine on the next. We therefore stress the need for a coherent and comprehensive approach to issues concerning children.

      Guyana looks forward to sharing further insights on its national experiences in the round table sessions in order to contribute to an elaboration of best practices with a view to establishing and sustaining a world fit for children.

Source: https://www.un.int/guyana/fr/statements_speeches/statement-h-e-honourable-priya-manickchand-minister-human-services-and-social

Statement by H. E. The Honourable Priya Manickchand, Minister of Human Services and Social Security of the Republic of Guyana, in the Commemorative High-level Plenary Meeting Devoted to the Follow-up to the Outcome of the Special Session on Children

We join with the rest of the international community in offering our heartfelt sympathies to the people and Government of Algeria and, indeed, to all humankind. We have seen yet another attack on humanity.

      We also recognize the statement made by the Honourable Attorney General and Minister of Legal Affairs of the Bahamas on behalf of the Caribbean Community.

      The delegation of the Republic of Guyana, which includes three children, is delighted to participate in this high-level meeting to review the progress of our collective efforts to create a world fit for children. On behalf of the Government and people of Guyana, I extend special greetings to all child representatives and commend them for their invaluable contribution to this year’s review process.

      The care, protection and development of all our children, in whom lies the future of humanity, are objectives that demand pride of place on our national and global agendas. Guyana stands committed to those objectives. We welcome the opportunity to share our experiences in implementation and to exchange ideas on the ongoing process of transforming our world into one fit for children.

      Since the 2002 special session on children, the Government of Guyana has taken several initiatives to enhance the well-being of our country’s children and to ensure that their rights are protected. We have succeeded in reducing child mortality, while increasing the immunization of children against vaccine-preventable diseases; immunization currently stands at 92 per cent. Success has been achieved in preventing mother-to-child transmission of HIV/AIDS, even as efforts have been enhanced in the provision and distribution, free of charge, of locally produced anti-retroviral drugs to those infected with HIV/AIDS. There are ongoing efforts to provide quality education to children in Guyana and, while we have achieved universal primary education, concentration is now focused on the attainment of universal secondary education and ensuring the completion of that grade of education by boys and girls alike.

      The principle of the best interests of the child guides Guyana’s jurisprudence as it relates to legislation on children. To date, we have enshrined in our Constitution the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which provides the framework for promoting healthy lives, combating HIV/AIDS, providing quality education for all and protecting children against abuse, exploitation and violence.

      It is disheartening to note the level of violence in many societies globally. For our part, we have embarked on a campaign to stamp out violence in our society, particularly violence against women and children. That matter is currently the subject of extensive national consultations on the basis of proposals by the Government to reform the law, strengthen protection and improve support and services to victims, while upholding the right of the defendant to a fair trial. Earlier this year, a Child Protection Service was established. The Government of Guyana continues to actively collaborate with UNICEF under the country programme of cooperation 2006-2010 to tackle child protection and welfare issues.

      Implementing a world fit for children has not been without challenges and setbacks, some of which are greater than those occasioned by financial and infrastructural constraints. Children across the world are at risk of further suffering on account of the global increase in food and fuel prices and in the cost of living. With internal and domestic conflicts and wars among countries, the innocence and rights of childhood are stolen. More needs to be done to address the scourge of poverty. More needs to be done to protect children from exposure to conflict situations, as well as to provide for their rehabilitation and reintegration into post-conflict societies.

      Preserving the natural environment for posterity is an important dimension of creating a world fit for children. As reports by the Nobel Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change make clear, human actions are impacting the kind of world our children will inherit. Renowned economist Nicholas Stern has highlighted that those who will suffer most are the developing countries, which have contributed the least to greenhouse gas emissions.

      Vulnerability can be considered in terms of geographic location and economy, as well as age. In the developed and developing countries alike, it is the children who are most vulnerable. Where climate change leads to disasters, destruction and death, children suffer the most. Many become orphans; many become disabled; many become displaced. Their health is affected, their education is affected, and their entire life is turned upside down.

      Global warming and consequent climate change must be addressed. Guyana has taken a leadership role in that effort. Our pristine rainforest does much service to the world in terms of carbon sequestration. The post-Kyoto Protocol framework should make provisions for standing rainforests with mechanisms for rewarding countries for conserving those rainforests.

      From this rostrum, we appeal to world leaders, and indeed all adults, to do everything they can to avoid the road to self-destruction and move our planet onto a path of recovery through massive reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. It will make little sense if we manage to eradicate violence against children on one day and they drown in a mighty flood or starve in a drought or famine on the next. We therefore stress the need for a coherent and comprehensive approach to issues concerning children.

      Guyana looks forward to sharing further insights on its national experiences in the round table sessions in order to contribute to an elaboration of best practices with a view to establishing and sustaining a world fit for children.

 

Source: https://www.un.int/guyana/fr/statements_speeches/statement-h-e-honourable-priya-manickchand-minister-human-services-and-social

The Alliance fully supports Minister Manickchand’s Stamp it Out campaign

Dear Editor,

I write to fulfil a long overdue promise to publicly congratulate Minister Priya Manickchand for her courage and commitment displayed in tackling the scourge of sexual violence at this most precarious time.

Many months ago, I had approached the Guyana Human Rights Association about giving voice and action to its publication “Justice For Rape Victims: Reform of Laws and Procedures in Guyana”, and was advised by Mr. McCormack that the Minister of Human Services and Social Security had pledged to address the issue. I thereafter spoke to the Minister herself, offering the AFC’s support in moving the GHRA work forward, and she asked me to be patient as she was working on an initiative that would address the problem of sexual violence frontally, and comprehensively.

I was pleasantly surprised to see that initiative unveiled as the “Stamp It Out!” document and follow-up consultations. I believe that the Minister must be congratulated for keeping her word at a time when other government officials are being accused of deceiving the public with their lies, half-truths, and false promises, and moreover, for grappling with such a serious issue that requires the effort and support of every Guyanese.

The “Stamp it Out!” proposals appear bold and ambitious and I am sure all of it will not find favour with everyone in society; or be even easy to implement in all aspects, but all decision-makers and stakeholders need to support the effort knowing that what we see reported in the news everyday is the tip of the iceberg as to what really is happening in every community in Guyana and especially within the depressed ones.

The AFC looks forward to working with our other parliamentary colleagues to reform the archaic laws relating to sexual offences and violence.

Yours faithfully,

Raphael Trotman

Source: https://www.stabroeknews.com/2007/opinion/letters/11/25/the-alliance-fully-supports-minister-manickchands-stamp-it-out-campaign/