Press release 120/2002
(22 October 2002)
It is my pleasure to welcome
you to this important meeting which is essentially a follow up to the UN General
Assembly Special Session on the Rights of the Child held in New York in May this
year. It also provides an opportunity for the Caribbean to continue the process
of building on the previous proposals for a Regional Framework to guide further
initiatives in this area. The Secretariat wishes to acknowledge the support from
UNICEF for this meeting and in particular for its sponsorship of the Background
paper that will be a focus of the discussions. It is to be noted that the
proposals from this meeting will be presented to the Seventh Meeting of the
Council for Human and Social Development (COHSOD VII) that begins tomorrow. In
this way, your decisions, based on empirical information and expert analysis and
discussion, will be incorporated into the wider agenda of the COHSOD.
No doubt, they will ensure that the work programme of the Directorate for
Human and Social Development will reflect an even greater sensitivity to the
priorities of our Region’s children.
In 2000, COHSOD IV, as most of
you will know, approved as a theme for the work of the Directorate of Human and
Social Development, Investing in Human
Resources with Equity. Since
then, every effort has been made to adopt an inter-sectoral approach to the
activities that have been undertaken in the following areas: crime and security and demand reduction;
mainstreaming gender into the core progamme areas of education, health,
and labour; and in our approach towards developing a regional strategy for human
and social development.
The issues that are the focus
of this special session also directly concern the COHSOD, and find an apt niche
in its inter-sectoral agenda. Indeed, issues such as child survival, early
childhood education and development, and child protection already connect with
some of the major activities of the work of the COHSOD.
Of direct relevance to your
deliberations is the current response to HIV/AIDS in which the CARICOM
Secretariat has been designated as coordinator of the Pan Caribbean Partnership
against HIV/AIDS. The strategic framework which guides the policies of this
partnership places emphasis on the reduction
of mother to child transmission, care and treatment of people living with
HIV/AIDS and on prevention through advocacy, education and outreach programmes,
among others. More recently, the Partnership negotiated for cheaper anti
retroviral drugs with pharmaceutical companies and is considering the
possibility of further reduction through the use of generics. Of special
importance in the package is the provision for the acquisition of free drugs to
all HIV/AIDS mothers to prevent mother to child transmission (MTCT) of the
virus. It is to be noted that the
area of generics is of special interest to Guyana, which has embarked on a
process designed to produce cheaper anti-retrovirals (ARVs). Whatever else may be achieved, reducing the spread of
HIV/AIDS overall would have a positive effect in saving the lives of many of the
Region’s children, as well as avert the trend of an increase in the number of
orphans whose parents succumbed to this dreaded disease.
The area of crime, drugs and
security also intersects with your discussions. A Caribbean Task Force on Crime
and Security, mandated by Heads of Government and coordinated by the Directorate
of Human and Social Development, shows how crime, linked to drugs and illicit
arms, provide the main pillars of destruction of human lives.
It is cause for increasing fear in the communities of our Region and a
serious disincentive to economic investment and growth. While the causes of
crime are variable and are no doubt related to poverty, unemployment and a
series of social and economic ills, the connection between crime and drugs is a
plague. It is an erosive source of lawlessness that gives expression in
widespread corruption that permeates all levels of society in our Region.
Of direct relevance to this special session is the extent to which it
affects the child whose young father or older brother or even innocent mother or
all of them, are the victims of this social malady. The Task Force has made
several recommendations on the way forward that will be the focus of the
discussion at the main session of the COHSOD.
Among the other programme
activities that have a direct bearing on the discussions of this special session
are:
a.
The configuration of early childhood education being facilitated by our
HRD activities, and which should be incorporated into the work of the Futures
Policy Group (FPG), a special Group approved by the COHSOD to develop a regional
strategy for Human and Social Development.
b.
Family Life activities that fall directly within the mandate of the
Caribbean Cooperation in Health, which are being developed in collaboration with
the health and education specialists.
c.
Activities related to gender mainstreaming that highlight the education
of mothers, the prevention of abuse, and the pivotal roles of child care which
need to be a joint venture, ideally undertaken by both parents.
I have just mentioned some of
the areas of intersection between the main focus of your deliberations today,
and the wider programme of the COHSOD. In
so doing, it is clear that the Rights of the Child present a critical component
of any social policy; and that the development of an appropriate social policy
is one that must be inter-sectoral in scope, in keeping with the integrating
theme – “Investing in Human Resources (especially our children) with
Equity”. This theme
reflects the Millennium Development Goals that provide the guiding principles
for your work. The CARICOM
Secretariat is committed to facilitating this work, and we wish to thank all of
you for being willing partners in this important venture.