150 year of
Freedom struggle: 30,000 Youth will foot-march from Meerut to Delhi
----------------------
Walled City to turn fortress
36,000
Youths Will March To Red Fort To Mark 150th Yr Of Uprising
As
36,000 youths march into Delhi on the 150th anniversary of the historic 1857
uprising on May 11, the Walled City will be turned into a fortress. Delhi
Police is busy making security and traffic arrangements for the grand celebration,
security levels for which are higher than those maintained for the annual
Independence Day celebrations.As part of the event, a grand function has been
planned at Red Fort, which will be attended by VVIPs including the President,
Prime Minister, Vice President, important political leaders, MPs, ministers,
diplomats, and selected delegates from neighbouring countries like Pakistan,
Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.‘‘This is the first time that the President, Prime Minister and Vice
President are coming together to the ramparts of Red Fort. The highest levels
of security will be maintained for the event,’’ said a senior police
official.According to
sources, security agencies will take over the Walled City area to conduct
intensive checks. A day before the event, parts of Lajpat Rai Market will be
evacuated and doors and windows of buildings facing the Red Fort will be
sealed. Jammers will be installed to check for explosives.Anti-sabotage checks are
being carried out and every dustbin and letterbox in the vicinity of the venue
and along VIP routes will be checked and sealed. Anti-sabotage squads have been
created comprising members from different agencies including Delhi Police,
ITBP, NSG, SPG, CISF, CRPF and the army to carry out the checks. Dog squads
will also be called in to check for suspicious objects.Security agencies have been
instructed to instantly gun down any flying object that they spot. Sharp
shooters have been stationed at some vital buildings to look out for suspicious
people. All senior officers would be on duty at the venue. Estimates suggest
that over 25,000 security personnel would be part of the specific arrangements
in addition to district police staff, which has been instructed to be on
high-alert.As for
traffic, about 30,000 people will march into Delhi from Meerut through Apsara
border on May 10, the road along the Rithala-Shahdara Metro route across the
Yamuna will remain closed for about six hours. ‘‘We will try and keep one
carriageway running as far as possible,’’ said a senior traffic official.The youths will reach the
border at 5 am and walk about 10 km to their camp on Pushta Road, behind the
electric crematorium (see map), through old Yamuna bridge by 11.30 am. They
will be joined there by about 5,000 volunteers from NSS and Bharat Scouts and
Guides. A selected gathering of about 5,000 representatives will meet for a
function at Vijay Chowk in the evening.Around 4 am the next morning, about 36,000
people will walk to Red Fort from the camp through Ring Road, Hanuman Setu,
Chowk Chhata Rail and Chowk Chandni Chowk. They are expected to cover the two
km distance in about an hour.The VIPs will take their seats by 7 am and will move out at 8.30 am —
the VIP movement is expected to affect traffic in central Delhi. Film stars
Shahrukh Khan, Rani Mukherji and Sanjay Dutt are also expected. After the
function, the youths will march back to the camp by 10 am and disperse using
buses. ‘‘Traffic around the area will be affected during the morning rush hour.
Traffic will also be diverted on roads around Red Fort while the function is
on,’’ said a senior traffic official
(Megha Suri | TNN New Delhi/Times of
India/11.5.2007)
Indian Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered
non-profit, non-governmental network organization, committed in developing
areas of mutual cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary
agencies, youth groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth
welfare in India.
ICYO functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in
India. It's family consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work and services through Youth
Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation: Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC,
United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's YDP
Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia.
ICYO - Platform of 356 Youth Organizations in India.
ICYO - India’s largest network of urban and rural
youth.
----------------------------
World Bank Provides Further
Support to Help India Curb the
Spread of HIV and AIDS
Washington, April 26, 2007 – The
World Bank approved today a US$250 million credit to support India’s National
AIDS Control Program (NACP) in its efforts to curb the spread and mitigate the
impact of HIV and AIDS in the country. The Third National HIV/AIDS Control
Project is designed to improve prevention programs, and amplify care, support,
and treatment of people living with HIV and AIDS.
The Government of India has embarked
on an ambitious goal of halting and reversing the HIV/AIDS epidemic by 2011,
ahead of the 2015 target of the 6th Millennium Development Goal. It has
developed and enhanced its response to the epidemic over the last two decades.
This sustained commitment has yielded many benefits, including an effective
blood safety program, increased numbers of clinics to treat sexually
transmitted diseases and voluntary counseling and testing centers for HIV,
special interventions among groups at highest risk of HIV, establishment of
prevention of parent to child transmission services and care, support and
treatment services for people living with HIV.
- Prevention is the top priority of
the project. Aims to reach 80 percent of high-risk groups over a five-year
period.
- Will support scaling up of
interventions in highly vulnerable sub-sections of society such as long
distance truckers and short duration migrant workers.
- Will provide treatment, care and
support to people living with the disease is a key component of the project
- Aims to strengthen and develop
skills within NACO, the State AIDS Control Societies and NGOs associated with
the program
- A common and comprehensive M&E
system will be supported
However with estimated cases of
adult infection reaching 5.2 million in 2005 (as reported by the national
surveillance system), significant challenges remain. “Despite these impressive
achievements, HIV and AIDS remains a serious threat to India’s health gains,”
said Isabel Guerrero, World Bank Country Director for India.“This project is
important because it will support the government’s scaling up of prevention,
care, support and treatment interventions nationwide. While the disease is
concentrated among high risk groups, .
With 99 percent of the population
still uninfected, prevention is the top priority of the project. The project
aims to reach 80 percent of people at highest risk over a five-year period. It
will support scaling up of interventions to reduce unsafe sex among sex workers
and their clients and reduce HIV transmission among injecting drug users, and
among highly vulnerable mobile populations.
In many parts of the country,
prevention efforts to reduce HIV prevalence among groups with high risk
behavior have not achieved full coverage. “The epidemic is clustered in certain
geographical areas,” said Suneeta Singh, World Bank Lead Public Health
Specialist and project co-task team leader. “Six states, representing 30
percent of India’s population already have what is considered to be a high
prevalence of HIV. It is absolutely essential to strengthen programs that
target the most marginalized groups at high risk of infection to prevent the
disea.
India
is also discovering the visible face of the epidemic with a significant number
of people living with HIV and AIDS. Hence providing treatment, care and support
to people living with the disease is a key component of the project. NACP began
providing free anti-retroviral therapy (ART) in high prevalence states in April
2004 and now has over 80,000 persons on treatment. It is estimated that during
the project period, care and support services will be provided to 380,000
people living with HIV and AIDS; and ART to 340,000 persons, 40,000 of which
are children.
The project also aims to undertake
strengthening and skills development within NACO, the State AIDS Control
Societies and of NGOs associated with the program to better carry out the task
of instituting good quality, greatly scaled up interventions in Ministry of
Health and Family Welfare and mainstreaming a response to HIV through other
ministries and the private sector. A comprehensive M&E system will be
supported, making in time information available for better management of the
program.
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit,
non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual
cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth
groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in
India.
ICYO functions
as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work and services through
Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia
Subject: HIV and AIDS is not on ADB annual meeting agenda
HIV/AIDS is not on ADB annual meeting agenda
The Fortieth Annual Meeting of the Board of Governors of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) will be held from 4 to 7 May 2007 at the Kyoto International Conference Center in Kyoto, Japan.
Asia civil society members, bilateral, multilateral and regional agencies should take note that even when, many commentators and researchers have indicated the link between HIV/AIDS and poverty and the impact of some of ADB loans and Grants on HIV infection, HIV/AIDS is not on the agenda of ADB meeting.
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) is a multilateral development finance institution whose mission is to reduce poverty in the Asia Pacific region. Although the ADB claims to operate in the interest of Asia's poorest citizens, civil society groups have long been concerned about the ADB's role in promoting sustainable and equitable growth in the region.
The ADB was founded in 1966 with the goal of eradicating poverty in the region. With over 1.9 billion people living on less than $2 a day in Asia, the institution has a formidable challenge. It plays the following functions for countries in the Asia Pacific region: • Provides loans and equity investments to its developing member countries (DMCs) • Provides technical assistance for the planning and execution of development projects and programs and for advisory services • Promotes and facilitates investment of public and private capital for development • Assists in coordinating development policies and plans of its DMCs
Though well-intentioned, ADB-funded operations have been responsible for causing widespread environmental and social damage, adversely affecting some of the regions poorest and most vulnerable communities.
Though publicly financed by taxpayer dollars, ADB activities (and those of other Multilateral Development Banks) are often carried out without the informed participation of affected people, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), or, in many cases, the elected officials in the borrowing countries. A global movement to reform the MDBs has based its activities on the assumption that sustainable development and poverty alleviation are impossible without informed public participation in the decision making process.
Civil Society groups involved in the ADB campaign are particularly concerned about the following issues:
• Access to information about the ADB's operations
• Public participation in the design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of ADB projects • The social and environmental impacts of ADB programs and projects, and the Bank's accountability for those impacts • The ADB's private sector lending • The ADB's role in regional and sub-regional economic cooperation
The Bank Information Center, in collaboration with its partners, works toward democratizing the ADB so that social and environmental considerations are incorporated in the Banks' decision making processes and operations.
On
26 March, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), together with other United
Nations agencies, governments and NGOs, announced in London the launch of The Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking.
The
launch, hosted by Baroness Mary Goudie, Member of the British House of Lords
and Board Member of Vital Voices Global Partnership, coincided with both the
two hundredth anniversary
of
the abolition of the trans-Atlantic slave trade and the bicentennial of the
abolition of the slave trade in the British Empire.
A
series of events throughout the world will culminate in Vienna, Austria, with
an International Conference against Human Trafficking from 27 to 29 November
2007.
Some
2.5 million people throughout the world are at any given time recruited,
entrapped, transported and exploited -- a process called human trafficking --
according to estimates of international experts.
Trafficking
in persons, whether for sexual exploitation or forced labour, affects virtually
every region of the world. UNODC reports that persons from 127 countries become
exploited in 137 nations.
"Slavery
is a booming international trade, less obvious than 200 years ago for sure, but
all around us," said UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa.
"Perhaps we simply prefer to close our eyes to it, as many law-abiding
citizens buy the products and the services produced on the cheap by
slaves."
Because
human trafficking is an underground crime, with many undiscovered and
unidentified victims, the true numbers are not known. The United States
Government estimates that between 600,000 to 800,000 people are trafficked
across international borders each year.
Human
trafficking has become big business. The UN and other experts estimate the total
market value of illicit human trafficking at $32 billion -- about $10 billion
is derived from the initial "sale" of individuals, with the remainder
representing the estimated profits from the activities or goods produced by the
victims of this barbaric crime.
A
Global Epidemic
Human
trafficking is a global problem, which UNODC believes has reached epidemic
proportions over the past decade. No country is immune, whether as a source, a
destination or a transit point for victims of human trafficking.
Most
victims of this modern-day slavery are women and young girls, many of whom are
forced into prostitution or otherwise exploited sexually. Trafficked men are
found in fields, mines and quarries, or in other dirty and dangerous working
conditions. Boys and girl sare trafficked into conditions of child labour,
within a diverse group of industries, such as textiles, fishing or agriculture.
A recent
UNODC report Trafficking
in Persons: Global Patterns identifies Albania, Bulgaria,
Belarus, China, Republic of Moldova, Nigeria, Thailand and Ukraine among the
countries that are the greatest sources of trafficked persons. Belgium,
Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Thailand, Turkey and the United
States are cited as the most common destinations.
Distinct
from the concept of forced labour, the act of human trafficking involves
additional elements, for example the act of recruitment (often by deceitful
promises); transportation; and the receipt and exploitation of the victim.
Difficult conditions such as poverty, lack of opportunities, including
unemployment, and displacement make people especially vulnerable.
Trafficking
victims are held in bondage through physical and/or psychological force; they
are not free to walk away. Even if they had the ability to escape from their
enslavement, typically they have nowhere to go -- they often lack identity
papers and have little or no money. Traffickers also threaten to harm the
victims' families as an additional deterrent against trying to flee. Many are
ill: HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases are common among women
and girls forced into prostitution.
Human
trafficking is a crime
The
UN Protocol Against Trafficking in Persons, in effect since December 2003,
makes human trafficking a crime. The Protocol has been signed and ratified by
more than 110 countries, yet the participating governments and their criminal
justice systems have not effectively curbed the practice. Few criminals are
convicted, and most victims never receive help -- on the contrary, many victims
themselves are convicted of offences such as illegal entry or unlawful
residence.
Among
its goals, the Global Initiative aims to raise public awareness throughout the
world as part of a larger strategy to eliminate human trafficking. This
increased attention will enable effective prevention efforts, such as raising
awareness among potential victims about the dangers of trafficking, reducing
demand for services and products that rely on slave labour, protecting victims
and improving law enforcement methods.
"Governments,
businesses, NGOs and citizens everywhere have a responsibility to work together
to address this modern-day slavery," says Melanne Verveer, Co-Founder and
Chair of Vital Voices Global Partnership. "The new Initiative will be
critical to progress in combating this global challenge. We urge everyone to
join the 21st century anti-trafficking movement."
Lured
by the promise of a better life, victims often are misled or deceived by
traffickers. They may initially consent to the recruitment as a means to escape
from extreme poverty and miserable living conditions. Women who were promised
domestic work or an education instead find themselves forced into prostitution
oruncompensated
labour. Parents are lured by the promise of good jobs and education for their
children, who are then held as slaves.
"Trafficking
in persons involves recruitment, transportation or the receiving of a
person," says Kristiina Kangaspunta, Chief of UNODC's Anti-Human
Trafficking Unit. "It involves abuse of power, violence, deceit and abuse
of vulnerability for the purpose of ongoing exploitation that generates illicit
income for the traffickers."
No Accurate Count
Because
human trafficking is a crime, and therefore clandestine, accurate numbers are
not available. Many experts believe 2.5 million represents the tip of a much
greater iceberg. The International Labour Organization (ILO) calculates the
minimum number of people in forced labour at 12.3 million, while research by
Free the Slaves, an NGO based in the United States, estimates 27 million people
in slavery.
German
authorities place the number of victims trafficked into that country at between
2,000 and 20,000 each year, but in 2004 only 972 victims were registered.
The
wide range of estimates highlights the need for better reporting. "We need
accurate numbers," says Ms. Kangaspunta, "but all our numbers are
based on second-hand information. How do you count something that is all
underground? We can't go to official statistics because nobody knows about
these crimes."
A Complicated
Issue
The
issue of human trafficking is immensely complex. Trafficking takes many forms.
International groups draw distinctions between victims of human trafficking,
migratory labourers and forced labour in one location, such as factory work in
a village or agricultural work in local fields.
"It
is all slavery," says Kevin Bales, President of Free the Slaves. "The
difference is in the way people are taken into slavery." Some people are
born into slavery. Though a common perception is that slavery has ended, it
still persists. "Slavery is basically the same as it always has
been," says Mr. Bales. "Slavery has always been about one person
controlling another, often using violence, to make a profit."
Throughout
history, slaves have been a capital investment for owners, costing as much as
the equivalent of $80,000 apiece. The unfortunate difference in the 21st
century is that modern slaves are inexpensive. With a swelling global
population and immense poverty in much of the world, the price has dropped to
about $100 a person, Bales reports. "That means they are disposable.
People enslaved today are less likely to receive medical care if they need it,
or decent food to keep them alive because they are so inexpensive."
Sexual Exploitation
Common
Data
collected by UNODC show that about 80 per cent of the victims of human
trafficking, most of them women and young girls, are forced into prostitution.
The remaining 20 per cent, usually themen and boys, face forced labour. About
half are under the age of 18.
Those
percentages may be misleading, says Ms. Kangaspunta. Most groups concerned with
human trafficking focus on women and sexual exploitation and do not see the
males in the fields, mines and construction jobs or even the women and children
in sweatshops and domestic servitude.
The
issue is politically sensitive because many countries and corporations have
benefited from this kind of enforced, cheap labour.
Human
trafficking has become big business, both for criminals engaged in trafficking
and for those who profit from the free labour. "The economy of human
trafficking is significant," said Executive Director Costa. " Since
the world woke up to this terrible reality, the mass of people trafficked and
exploited would populate a state like Kansas, producing an income equivalent
also to that of Kansas, or Montana."
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit,
non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual
cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth
groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in
India.
ICYO
functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family
consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work and services through
Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia
(E
- newsletter from network of Indian youth organizations)
==========================================
India's Skewed
Sex Ratio Puts GE Sales in Spotlight
INDERGARH, India -- General Electric
Co. and other companies have sold so many ultrasound machines in India that
tests are now available in small towns like this one. There's no drinking water
here, electricity is infrequent and roads turn to mud after a March rain
shower. A scan typically costs $8, or a week's wages.
GE has waded into India's market as
the country grapples with a difficult social issue: the abortion of female
fetuses by families who want boys. Campaigners against the practice and some
government officials are linking the country's widely reported skewed sex ratio
with the spread of ultrasound machines. That's putting GE, the market leader in
India, under the spotlight. It faces legal hurdles, government scrutiny and
thorny business problems in one of the world's fastest-growing economies.
"Ultrasound is the main reason
why the sex ratio is coming down," says Kalpana Bhavre, who is in charge
of women and child welfare for the Datia district government, which includes
Indergarh. Having a daughter is often viewed as incurring a lifetime of debt
for parents because of the dowry payment at marriage. Compared to that, the
cost of an ultrasound "is nothing," she says.
For more than a decade, the Indian
government has tried to stop ultrasound from being used as a tool to determine
gender. The devices use sound waves to produce images of fetuses or internal
organs for a range of diagnostic purposes. India has passed laws forbidding
doctors from disclosing the sex of fetuses, required official registrations of
clinics and stiffened punishments for offenders. Nevertheless, some estimate
that hundreds of thousands of girl fetuses are aborted each year.
GE -- by far the largest seller of
ultrasound machines here through a joint venture with Indian outsourcing giant
Wipro Ltd. -- has introduced its own safeguards, even though that means
forsaking sales. "We stress emphatically that the machines aren't to be
used for sex determination," says V. Raja, chief executive of GE
Healthcare South Asia. "This is not the root cause of female feticide in
India."
But the efforts have failed to stop
the problem, as a growing economy has made the scans affordable to more people.
The skewed sex ratio is an example of how India's strong economy has, in
unpredictable ways, exacerbated some nagging social problems, such as the
traditional preference for boys. Now, some activists are accusing GE of not
doing enough to prevent unlawful use of its machines to boost sales.
"There is a demand for a boy
that's been completely exploited by multinationals," says Puneet Bedi, a
New Delhi obstetrician. He says GE and others market the machines as an
essential pregnancy tool although the scans often aren't necessary for mothers
in low risk groups.
Earlier this month, prosecutors in
the city of Hyderabad brought a criminal case against the GE venture with Wipro
as well as Erbis Engineering Co., the medical-equipment distributor in India
for Japan's Toshiba Corp. In the suits, the district government alleges that
the companies knowingly supplied ultrasound machines to clinics that weren't
registered with the government and were illegally performing sex-selection
tests. The penalty is up to three months in prison and a fine of 1,000 rupees.
Both companies deny wrongdoing and
say they comply with Indian laws. A GE spokesman said yesterday the company
hadn't received court notification but its legal team would be looking into the
charges.
Vivek Paul, who helped build the
early ultrasound business in India, first as a senior executive at GE and then
at Wipro, says blame should be pinned on unethical doctors, not the machine's
suppliers. "If someone drives a car through a crowded market and kills
people, do you blame the car maker?" says Mr. Paul, who was Wipro's chief
executive before he left the company in 2005. Mr. Paul is now a managing
director at private equity specialists TPG Inc., formerly known as Texas
Pacific Group.
Critical Market
India has been a critical market to
GE. Its outsourcing operations have helped the Fairfield, Conn., giant cut
costs. The country also is a growing market for GE's heavy equipment and other
products. The company won't disclose its ultrasound sales. But Wipro GE's
overall sales in India, which includes ultrasounds and other diagnostic
equipment, reached about $250 million last year, up from $30 million in 1995.
Annual ultrasound sales in India
from all vendors reached $77 million in 2006, up about 10% from the year
before, according to an estimate from consulting firm Frost & Sullivan,
which describes GE as the clear market leader. Other vendors include Siemens
AG, Philips Electronics NV and Mindray International Medical Ltd., a new
Chinese entrant for India's price-sensitive customers.
India has long struggled with an
inordinate number of male births, and female infanticide -- the killing of
newborn baby girls -- remains a problem. The abortion of female fetuses is a
more recent trend, but unless "urgent action is taken," it's poised
to escalate as the use of ultrasound services expands, the United Nations Children's
Fund said in a report this year. India's "alarming decline in the child
sex ratio" is likely to exacerbate child marriage, trafficking of women
for prostitution and other problems, the report said.
The latest official Indian census in
2001 showed a steep decline in the relative number of girls aged 0-6 years from
10 years earlier: 927 girls for every 1,000 boys compared with 945 in 1991. In
much of northwest India, the number of girls has fallen below 900 for every
1,000 boys. In the northern state of Punjab, the figure is below 800.
Wider Gap
Only China today has a wider gender
gap, with 832 girls born for every 1,000 boys among infants aged 0-4 years,
according to Unicef. GE sells about three times as many ultrasound machines in
China as in India. In January, the Chinese government pledged to improve the
gender balance, including tighter monitoring of ultrasounds. Some experts
predict China will be more effective than India in enforcing its rules, given
its success at other population-control measures.
Boys in India are viewed as wealth
earners during life and lighters of one's funeral pyre at death. India's
National Family Health Survey, released in February, showed that 90% of parents
with two sons didn't want any more children. Of those with two daughters, 38%
wanted to try again. While there are restrictions on abortions in this
Hindu-majority nation, the rules offer enough leeway for most women to get
around them.
GE took the lead in selling
ultrasounds in the early 1990s soon after it began manufacturing the devices in
India. It tapped Wipro's extensive distribution and service network to deliver
its products to about 80% of its customers. For more remote locations and
lower-end machines, it used sales agents.
The company also teamed with banks
to help doctors finance the purchase of their machines. GE now sells about 15
different models, ranging from machines costing $100,000 that offer
sophisticated color images to basic black-and-white scanners that retail for
about $7,500.
To boost sales, GE has targeted
small-town doctors. The company has kept prices down by refurbishing old
equipment and marketed laptop machines to doctors who traveled frequently,
including to rural areas. GE also offered discounts to buyers inclined to boast
about their new gadgets, according to a former GE employee.
"Strategically, we focused on
those customers who had big mouths," said Manish Vora, who until 2006 sold
ultrasounds in the western Indian state of Gujarat for the Wipro-GE joint
venture.
Without discussing specific sales
tactics, Mr. Raja, of GE Healthcare South Asia, acknowledges the company is
"aggressive" in pursuing its goals. But he points out that ultrasound
machines have broad benefits and make childbirth safer. As the machines become
more available, women can avoid making long trips into cities where health care
typically is more expensive, he says.
Indian authorities have tried to
regulate sales. In 1994, the government outlawed sex selection and empowered
Indian authorities to search clinics and seize anything that aided sex
selection. Today any clinic that has an ultrasound machine must register with
the local government and provide an affidavit that it won't conduct sex
selection. To date, more than 30,000 ultrasound clinics have been registered in
India.
GE has taken a number of steps to
ensure customers comply with the law. It has educated its sales force about the
regulatory regime, demanded its own affidavits from customers that they won't
use the machines for sex selection, and followed up with periodic audits, say
executives. They note that in 2004, the first full year it began implementing
these new measures, GE's sales in India shrank by about 10% from the year
before. The sales decline in the low-end segment, for black-and-white
ultrasound machines, was especially sharp, executives say. Only last year did
GE return to the sales level it had reached before the regulations were
implemented, according to Mr. Raja.
Complying with Indian law is often
tricky. GE can't tell if doctors sell machines to others who fail to register
them. Different states interpret registration rules differently. GE also is
under close scrutiny by activists battling the illegal abortion of female
fetuses. Sabu George, a 48-year-old activist who holds degrees from Johns
Hopkins and Cornell universities, crisscrosses the country to spot illegal
clinics.
Criminal Case
The criminal case in Hyderabad
against Wipro-GE, a company representative, three doctors and an ultrasound
technician followed an inspection in 2005 that found one clinic couldn't
produce proper registration and hadn't kept complete records for two years. A
team of inspectors seized an ultrasound supplied by Wipro-GE. The inspection
team's report said it suspected the clinic was using the machines for illegal
sex determination.
The owner, Sarawathi Devi,
acknowledged in an interview that her clinic, Rite Diagnostics, wasn't
officially registered at the time of the 2005 inspection. She said the
ultrasound machine was owned by a "free-lance" radiologist who had
obtained proper documentation for the Wipro-GE machine, but wasn't there when
the inspectors had arrived. She denied the clinic has conducted sex
determination tests. Later in 2005, Dr. Devi's records show she registered the
clinic with the government and bought a Wipro-GE machine, a sale the company
confirms.
The court case was part of a wider
dragnet spearheaded by Hyderabad's top civil servant, District Magistrate
Arvind Kumar. During an audit last year, Mr. Kumar demanded paperwork for 389
local scan centers. Only 16% could furnish complete address information for its
patients, making it almost impossible to track women to check if they had
abortions following their scans. Mr. Kumar ordered the seizure of almost
one-third of the ultrasound machines in the district due to registration and
paperwork problems. A suit also was lodged against Erbis, the Toshiba dealer.
GE's Mr. Raja says that, in general,
if there's any doubt about the customer's intent to comply with India's laws,
it doesn't make the sale. "There is no winking or blinking," he says.
A Wipro-GE representative is
scheduled to appear May 7 at the Hyderabad court. An Erbis spokesman said he
was unaware of the case in Hyderabad. A court date for Erbis hasn't been set.
A visit to the clinic in Indergarh,
a town surrounded by fields of tawny wheat, shows the challenges GE faces
keeping tabs on its machines. Inside the clinic, a dozen women wrapped in saris
awaited tests on GE's Logiq 100 ultrasound machine. The line snaked along
wooden benches and down into a darkened basement. On the wall, scrawled in
white paint, was the message: "We don't do sex selection."
Manish Gupta, a 34-year-old doctor,
said he drives two hours each way every week to Indergarh from much larger Jhansi
city, where there are dozens of competing ultrasound clinics. He said even when
offered bribes he refuses to disclose the sex of the fetus. "I'm just
against that," Dr. Gupta said.
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit,
non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual
cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth
groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in
India.
ICYO
functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family
consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work
and services through Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster)
Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International,
Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia
India's female civil
servants are being told to provide details of their menstrual cycles in a new
job appraisal form.
Women have been angered
by the new form sent out this year which asks, among questions about their
goals and skills, "when was your last menstrual period?" and
"give details of your menstrual history."
It also says "all
female officers" must list details of their last maternity leave.
"This is insensitive. We feel strongly about this," said Seema Vyas,
a civil servant in the western state of Maharashtra's administration
department. "What will the government do with this information?"
All civil servants
routinely undergo health check-ups, but the details of the tests are not
supposed to be part of their appraisals. The form was based on guidelines
issued by the Health Ministry, a senior government official said on condition
of anonymity.
In Maharashtra women
angered by the new appraisal form are to meet next week to organize a formal
complaint to the federal government's personnel department, demanding the
offending questions be excised.
There was no word on
whether women bureaucrats in other parts of the country were planning to make
similar demands, and the Federal Health Ministry said it had not yet received
any complaints from female civil servants.
Nearly 10 per cent of
India's 4,000 civil service bureaucrats are women. One female civil servant
said on condition of anonymity that she and others were shocked by the move,
which showed gender insensitivity at the top level of the Indian bureaucracy.
Indian Committee of Youth Organizations
(ICYO) is a registered non-profit, non-governmental network organization,
committed in developing areas of mutual cooperation and understanding among
different youth voluntary agencies, youth groups, clubs and individuals working
in the field of youth welfare in India.
ICYO functions as an umbrella organization
of youth NGOs in India. It's family consists of over 356 organizations spread
in 122 districts of 22 states from different corners of India.
Affiliation: Consultative (Roster)
Status with ECOSOC, United Nations; Consultative Status with Commission on
Sustainable Development; Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian
Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's YDP
Network; Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians
(IAPPD); International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD); World
Youth Foundation, Malaysia.
(E-newsletter
from network of Indian youth organizations)
==========================================
ICYO - Platform of 356 Youth
Organizations in India.
ICYO - India’s
largest network of urban and rural youth.
==========================================
South
Asian Conference on
Youth
& Democracy
Date: August 12-152007
Place: Pune, India
The role of young people is immense and vitally important in
any democracy. As India and Pakistan completes the celebration of sixty years
of independence on 15th August, the Centre for Youth Development and
Activities (CYDA) in association with like-minded organizations intend to
organize a 3-day international conference on “Youth & Democracy in South
Asia”.
The objective of conference is to bring together, young people, youth activists and academicians
from different walks of life and deliberate on concerns and issues of democracy
in the context of young people.
Today youth become mere spectators in the processes of
development in almost all South Asian countries. Youth in leadership is almost
vanishing and awareness as well as attitude towards civic engagement is
disappearing. The expected outcome is increased involvement of youth in
decision-making roles in democracies they represent.If the democracies to function effectively youth shall
become participants and a participant youth shall understand the meaning of
citizenship, polices and governance and have the acquired skills to voice their
concerns and ability to make system accountable.
The Conference will aim at discussing various dimensions
that youth can and must play not only on issues that concern them but also in
the formulations of policies that affect them.Youth as well as academicians from South Asian countries as
well as a few Asia Pacific regions are invited to participate. The conference
will be inaugurated on International Youth Day, 12th August and will
end on 15 August 2007.
Those
are interested to attend or presentation the paper in conference, please
send the concept paper (not more than 500 words) with full details (name,
sex, age, contact address, country representing.
The organizer will provide the lodging boarding to selected
participants only, the travel (including international travel) and others
expense will be the responsibility of participants or nominating organization.
Interested participants send the above information to email
id cyda@...
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit,
non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual
cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth
groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in
India.
ICYO
functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family
consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work
and services through Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster)
Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International,
Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia.
Women Group Launch a Mass Anti-Family
Planning Campaign in Manipur,
Despite
Population
growth of Manipur is Over & Above the National Average
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Deciding on
Family Size Parents` Prerogative`
Akoijam Sunita
IMPHAL, Apr 2: Even though 64.5 % married women in Manipur
do not want more than two children, United Women`s Front, one of the most
recently formed women pressure groups in the state, is all set to launch a mass
anti-family planning campaign throughout the state.
Ph Indira, assistant secretary, UWF maintained, "What
the Indian government wants from Manipur is the land and not the people, and
the family planning measures are part of several strategies to wipe out the
native population."
Reacting to the announcement of the anti-family planning
stance taken up by this organization, an official of the state family welfare
department responsible for the implementation of family planning programmes
said that even though in the early period of the implementation, very few women
avail the facilities of family planning programme in Manipur, currently the
programme is being implemented successfully.
She said, "Almost all the married educated women are
using their choice method of family planning to avoid unwanted pregnancy after
the birth of two or three children."
Speaking on condition of anonymity, a working mother of two
said, "I fully support family planning. Why should we go for big family
when we don`t have the required support systems and an enabling environment?
For my two children I have already chalked out a lump sum budget for their
education and other needs."
She quickly added, "Money is a big issue but going for
a manageable family size is not just about money. Moreover I don`t think it
would be fair to bring in more babies when there are so much of shortcomings in
our state."
For 47 years old Mobi, the greatest regret of his life is
not taking timely family planning measures. He said, "As a casual labourer,
making ends meet for myself is a challenge. I have 5 children and now I
realized that having many children is not really God`s gifts, they are just
human ignorance. I fully support family planning. It should be actually banned
to have children beyond one`s ability to provide quality life."
As per the 2005-06 survey report of the National Family
Health Survey conducted by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare throughout
the country, 64.5 % of the married women in Manipur do not want more than two
children. It further reported that 72.2 % of the married women in the urban
areas are availing the facilities of family planning after having two children
while the percentage was 60.2 in the rural areas.
The survey report also stated that 68.8 % of the married
women with two sons do not want more children while 75.8 % of the women having
one son and a daughter do not want further children. However, the report stated
that only 28.3 % of the women having two daughters do not want more children.
Moreover, 4.8 % of the married women of age range 15 to 49 are using any kind
of family planning method available.
The population of Manipur has increase from 18.31 lakhs in
1991 to 22.94 lakhs in 2001 registering a decadal growth of 24.86 percent
between 1991 and 2001 as compared to 21.35 % at all India level.
When asked as to how UWF is looking at expanding the family
size given the constraints one faces in giving quality life, Indira said that
the first priority will be given at reviving and making the government schools
functional so that children can get quality education at affordable prices. She
added that her organisation will take steps in making the people hard working
and self-dependent by ensuring that government`s schemes for people`s welfare
reaches the needy. She said that the drive against family planning will be
taken up subsequently.
Finding the whole campaign amusing and impractical, a
working mother of one said, "Family planning policy of the government is
based on common sense and need for safeguarding the reproductive health of
women. I think deciding on when to have baby and how many is entirely the
prerogative of the parents. The emotional and mental preparedness of the
parents and their ability to provide a quality life should be the decider for family
size".
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit,
non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual
cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth
groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in
India.
ICYO
functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family
consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work and services through
Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia
With the SC staying the
government’s quota plans, the students have proved that youth can bring about a
change even against the political will. Now, they want to take the fight inside
Parliament. With the students now planning to enter politics, has Indian youth
finally realised their social responsibility?
• Do the students
need to take their activism forward and enter
active politics to have their say in the system?
‘Youth brings a fresh approach’
• It is only the youth who can fight against corruption and other ills dogging
the society. They bring a fresh approach to the system, which has been
corrupted by the vested interests of unscrupulous politicians, government officials
and businessmen. –UDAY
‘We need a global perspective’
• If we are really want to develop India and make the country a superpower, it
is very important that the task is given to the GenX. They are the people of
today, are well educated and have an international perspective. It is
imperative that they enter politics and help in managing the affairs of this
country. – N CHANDER
‘They have to clear the mess’
• Till now, the youth of India used to
stay away from politics because of its reputation. No parents wanted their
child to take up politics. But it is important that Young India enters into the
mess that is politics to clear it. If we all come together, India can be put on
the fast-track to global superstardom. – ABHI
‘Merit comes first’
• If the students come together, they
can definitely do a great job. A case in point is the anti-quota stir. The
students proved that merit is more important than the government’s whims. Keep
up the good work. – HARSHA
‘They are the
decision-makers’
• The future of this country is in the
hands of the youth. It is they who shall either enjoy or suffer from the
decisions that are taken today. They should definitely take an active interest
in politics. – DR RANJEET SINGH
“Missing
Girls” – Current legal and social challenges
Taking into account the
alarming trend of declining child sex ratio and its causes, the amended Act -
Pre Conception and Pre Natal Diagnostic Technique (Prohibition of Sex
Selection) – was enacted in 2003. The Act renders any act of sex selection
illegal and stipulates legal restrictions on the owners and operators of the
Ultrasound clinics, such as registration, maintaining records of all pregnancy
related procedures and such other.
A team of Central
Supervisory Board, a body set up by the Act to oversee the strict
implementation of its guidelines, recently made surprise visits to a few
Hospitals in Mumbai and Pune. The team found irregularities in record
maintenance, even among well reputed hospitals, and took action to seal the
machines. This and the following course of action indicate serious gaps in
adherence and implementation of the PCPNDT Act. The future of the girl child is
made even dismal, when such apathy towards the Act colludes with the prevalent
social mindset that prefers son to daughter. Therefore, a public dialogue is
required to meet the legal and social challenges in addressing the issue of
‘missing girls’.
The programme organised
by Center for Youth Development and Activities (CYDA) on this issue, which will
have a panel discussion, followed by question-answer session.
CYDA has recently
conducted a national level study on the issue of declining child sex ratio with
Lead Consultant Josantony Joseph, which was commissioned by United Nations
Population Fund (UNFPA), India. The report of the study will also be
released on the occasion.
Panel:
Dr. Rajshekhar Iyer, Medical Director and
Appropriate Authority, PCMC
Dr. Devendra Shirole, Senior Secretary, IMA,
Maharashtra
Audry Fernandes, Social Activist, Tathapi and
member of the Advisory Committee, PCPNDT Cell, Pune District
Josantony Joseph, Lead Consultant to the UNFPA
commissioned study
Date: Wednesday,
4th April 2007
Time: 4.00
to 6.00 pm
Venue: Shramik
Patrakar Sangh Auditorium, Ganjave Chowk, Pune
SAARC Summit 2007 Must Act to End
Cross-boarder Human Trafficking for sexual Purpose
The human trafficking for
commercial sexual exploitation and abuse of children and women is a major
matter of concern in the SAARC region (South Asia). The SAARC countries signed
and later ratified the ‘SAARC Convention on Preventing and Combating
Trafficking in Women and Children for Prostitution’ but little progress has
been made to translate those commitment into decisive action by the these seven
countries.
The next SAARC Summit scheduled for April 2– 4, 2007 to be
held in New Delhi and it is high time to raise the concern and seek proactive
role of all the parties.
To discuss these issues “Indian Network for Combating Trafficking”
(INCT) organized a meeting on March 25, 2007 in New Delhi.
The
INCT discussed the commitment made under the “SAARC Convention on Preventing
and Combating Trafficking in Women and Children for Prostitution”.
Mr
Ravi Narayan, Secretary General of Indian Committee of Youth Organizations
(ICYO) welcomed the participants and briefed them about the current status of
the “Convention” in some of the countries.
Ms Roma Debabrata, President of STOP explained the problem faced in recovery, repatriation and
integration and hoped for early
establishment of mutual legal assistance between the SAARC member
countries.
Dr. (Ms)
Jyotsna Chatterji, Secretary JWP-India urged the countries participating in the
SAARC Summit to put in motion the Convention in total and called to establish a regional taskforce.
Ms Salma Ali, Executive Director of BNWLA,
Bangladesh emphasized for protocol for
rescuer operation and smooth repatriation system, to put on place as
committed in the ‘Convention”.
The meeting finally agreed to emphasized on
following points:
- According
to the SAARC Convention, the task force is formulated on priority basis.
-Protocol
for rescue operation and smooth repatriation system.
-Operationalize
the mutual legal assistance between the SAARC member countries.
-The
bilateral and multidimensional dialogue and plan of action on standardized care
and support for the survivors of trafficking.
The INCT urged to SAARC Summit to look into the above matter and act
proactively to stop trafficking in persons and protect the human rights of the
trafficked survivors.
The others organizations those contributed to the deliberations in the
meeting include the National Youth Project, All India Seva Sangh, Mahatma
Gandhi Sewa Ashram, Delhi Mahila Samaj andYoung Women’s Association (YWA) .
The INCT hosted the meeting. INCT is the national platform of
organizations working for protecting children and women from trafficking and
preventing commercial sexual exploitation of children in India.
- RHIYA Project officially comes to a close. Good Practices Dissemination meeting held.
- Male delegation visited ICYO.
- YES launch Global Fund for Youth Entrepreneurship.
- India host 4th APCRSH.
- Volunteer opportunity in Read India Campaign.
Upcoming events:-
- National Integration Youth Camp in Phalodi.
- National Workshop on the Strategic Use of Games
- Arya Youth Camps for spirituality development.
- Conference on "HIV/AIDS.
- Int. Children’s Art Competition.
- World Youth Congress 2008
- Global Youth Forum in Geneva.
- Int. Symposium on "The Role of Good Governance in Economic Development.
-
RHIYA Good Practices Dissemination Meeting Held
UNFPA implemented project RHIYA (Reproductive Health Initiative for Youth in ASIA) in seven Asian countries (Vietnam, Laos, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Nepal and Sri Lanka) from period of 2003 to 2007 with the partnership of EU has officially come to end this year..Under the RHIYA different project were designed for different country. The outcome result of these projects is encouraging according the implementing organizations.
The selected eleven best practices of RHIYA project are documented by published. The EC and UNFPA jointly organized the ‘Good Practices Dissemination Meeting’ in Bangkok, Thailand from February 7-8, 2007.
The meeting was started with opening remark by Mr. Bill Musoke, Deputy Director of the Asia Pacific Division of United Nations Population fund (UNFPA) and Mr. Andrew Jacobs, Head of Operations, European Commission delegation, Thailand.
Thierry Lucas, RHIYA Programme Manager and the other members of the panel Ms. Andrea Irwin and Mr. Oliver Well were spoke on the overview of the good practices exercise of RHIYA Methodology and key achievements and Lessons learnt during the first session.
According to panelists ‘RHIYA Good Practice Documentation Exercise’ was carried out in 2006 to identify and document good practices from each of the seven RHIYA countries and to present them in a way that would be useful for implementers of SRH programmes for young people. Four thematic booklets containing 11 full cases studies are produced.
There were over 90 participants from 11 countries in the meeting. There were three representatives from India attended the event including Mrs.Poonam Mutreja from Mac Arthur Foudnation, Ms.Anjali from Mamta and Mr. Vijay Bharatiya from Indian Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO).
The Indian delegates shared their experiences and raised points for enhancing the understanding. For ICYO it was an opportunity for wider interaction and understanding the different cultural background influencing the outcome of the projects. ICYO not only raised its some of its concerns on the sustainability but also appreciated the efforts of the young people in these countries who worked in challenging environment.
Among the groups in which ICYO participated were the case study presentation by young people from Laos about ‘establishing First youth Centre’ there, Creating Youth Friendly communities in Bangladesh, and case study from Pakistan where Teenagers & Tehsil Nazims (head of a local government tier), Mothers & Mullahs made new alliances for young people’s reproductive health. All were which is managed by the dedicated youths who are working in challenging environment.
ICYO also realized the importance of giving more political space and opportunity to youth in the seven countries where RHIYA work was done.
Towards the end, the EC delegation shared the“Reproductive Health in EU Cooperation Strategy (2007-2013) – A shift in implementation modalities”.
Delegation of ‘Community Organizations Development Council of Maldives’ visited India.
The three-member delegation from Community Organizations Development Council of Maldives was in India recently, on its expose trip. The delegation includes Mr. Ibrahim Manik, Chairman, Mr Abdul Sattar Hassan, Assistant Executive Director and Mr. Hussain Shareef, Assistant Director.
The delegation visited ICYO secretariat on 7th. The ICYO briefed about its activities.
During their visit, ICYO arranged the meeting with representatives of some youth organizations from Delhi, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan. The delegates exchange the views in the meeting.
The visited of delegation in India was coordinated by Commonwealth Youth Programme Asia Centre.
Global Fund for Youth Entrepreneurship Launch by YES
The Youth Employment Summit (YES) Inc. launched the ‘Global Fund for Youth Entrepreneurship‘ (YES Fund) on February 7,2007 in a function held in New Delhi.
YES Fund is a 2006 Clinton Global Initiative aimed at “building a coalition of partners all over the world to work on creating markets and unleashing entrepreneurship".
Ms Poonam Ahluwalia, President, YES Inc. stressed in her address in launching that the need for working together sharing that no single organization can be capable of handling the huge and complex task of generating employment opportunities. Expressing her delight at the prospect of India hosting the YES Fund, she remarked that "India has shown the world how to face challenges, and move forward purposefully by building local infrastructure, and this knowledge has to be transferred all over the world”.
Honorable Mani Shankar Aiyer, Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports, Government of
India welcomed the YES Fund to India and extended his support to the initiative to create youth entrepreneurs in the country. He applauded the fact that YES focuses on rural youth enterprise development for realization of the goal.” He added that the youth are not to be looked as objects of charity by businesses but as partners.
Next APCRSHin Hyderabad, India
The next APCRSH (Asia-Pacific Conference on Reproductive, and Sexual Health and Rights) will be held from October 29-30, 2007 in Hyderabad, India. The organizer is expecting more than 1,500 participants from population, reproductive health, reproductive rights, women rights, HIV and AIDS related civil society organizations, government officials, policy makers, donors and UN representatives.
The international steering committee meeting held in Hyderabad recently, finalized the agenda etc. The conference will focus on youth related issues in its track 2 of agenda.
ICYO will encourage the participation of youth organizations in the 4thAPCRSH.
Join Read India Campaign
Pratham (NGO working for primary education of underprivileged children in India) recently launched a campaign called Read India, which aims to ensure all children in India from Standard 1-5 can read, write and do arithmetic. The deadline set by Pratham is 2009.
Pratham is looking for self-motivated and enthusiastic leaders to volunteer for this campaign and offering internships to students who would like to work for the Read India campaign from their place of living.
To join the READ INDIA campaign write readindia@... or contact Ronald Abraham at phone- 9818715553 or by email: ronald.abraham@...
Upcoming events:-
National Integration Youth Camp
The National Youth Project will organize the National Youth Camp in Phalodi, Rajasthan from April 9 – 11, 2007. The camp is open for youth (boys and girls both) and 500 youth are expected to participate.
The organizer will provide the group accommodation and simple vegetarian food. The 50% railway concession available if travel in a group of 5 or more.
For more detail and participation contact: icyoindia@...
National Workshop on the Strategic Use of Games
The ‘National Workshop on The Strategic Use of Games’ will be held from April 17 to 20, 2007 at Yuva centre, Khar Ghar, Mumbai and organize byAkshara-a Women’s Resource Centre
The workshop is for collectively explore the use of games for consciousness raising and communication of gender justice issues.
It is a four day brainstorming, skills training and gender workshop to: to share interactive games and experiences of participating organisations; presentation of local games by participants and collectively give feminist inputs; to Conduct a gender training to introduce issues of gender rights and systems of discrimination; introduce participants to the Yuvati Mela, its games and info stalls
The workshop is open to activists and staff organisations, men and women, who would like to explore the possibilities of using interactive games to impart gender consciousness to young women in their area.
The registration fee is Rs 700/-. For participation contact aksharaprograms@...
Arya Youth Camps
Central Arya Youth Council (Kendriya AryaYuvak Parishad) New Delhi will organize two camps in Delhi in coming months. The one camp is for girls and other one for boys.
The Girls Camp will be held in kalkaji, New Delhi from May 20-27, 2007 and this residential camp is open for girls of age 12 to 18 years. The organizer is expecting the two hundred girls in the camp.
The second Youth Camp for boys, will be held at Pitampura in Delhi. This National Youth Camp is also open for youth age of 12 to 18. The dates are June 9-17, 2007.
The theme of both camps will be personality development and promote the nationalism among youth. Mr. Anil Arya, National President of Arya Yuvak Parishad hopeful that these week long (each) camps will help in inter-talent exchange among young people and character development in the participants. The presence of eminent persons from spiritual field will promote the religious faith among youth.
For more detail contact Arya Yuva Parishad(Mr. D. K. Bhagat): dkbhagat@...
Conference on "HIV/AIDS: Corporate India's Response to Care and Treatment"
CII is organizing a Conference on "HIV/AIDS: Corporate India's Response to Care & Treatment", on March 30, 2007 in New Delhi.
The panel discussions shall focus on challenges and opportunities in access to care and treatment in HIV/AIDS.
Int. Conference on Asian Youth and Childhoods
The 8th International Conference on Asian Youth and Childhoods 2007 will be held from November 22-24, 2007 in Lucknow, India and organized by Circle for Child and youth Research Cooperation in India & J N Post Graduate College, University of Lucknow.
According to organizer the conference will provide opportunities for academicians and professionals from social sciences and related fields to interact with members inside and outside their own particular disciplines.
The conference will cover the topics includes, New trends in youth and childhood research; Asian youth and new trajectories; Youth, international migration and globalization; Inequalities in child and youth population; Young people and new technology; Young people and media; Child and Youth rights in Asia etc.
As part of the activities to celebrate the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty and the end of the first Decade for the Eradication of Poverty, the Division for Social Policy and Development at the United Nations invites children from all over the world to participate in an art competition on the theme “We can end poverty”.
The entry is open for Children from all around the world from age 5 to 15 years old.
The 4th World Youth Congress will bring together 600 of the world's most dynamic young sustainable development activists from around the world to Quebec City in August 2008.
The GAID will organize the Global Youth Forum and will take place in Geneva from May 24-25, 2007.The Forum is open for the youth leaders of age between18-25 from all over the world.
Int. Symposium on "The Role of Good Governance in Economic Development"
Int. Symposium on "The Role of Good Governance in Economic Development" will be held from August 1-3, 2007 at the World Bank Headquarters, Washington DC.
200 young professionals and students will attend the second annual symposium “Good Governance in Economic Development” and examine the issue of corruption and inefficient governance as a challenge to economic development.
Indian Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit, non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in India.
ICYO functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family consists of over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work and services through Youth Organizations; To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society; To promote effective youth programmmes; To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the development of youth work; To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings; To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations; Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development; Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC); Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand; ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's YDP Network; Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD); International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO); Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD); World Youth Foundation, Malaysia
(E
- newsletter from network of Indian youth organizations)
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NEW UN ESTIMATES
PREDICT 2.5 BILLION
INCREASE IN
WORLD POPULATION
BY 2050
The world's population is on track to surpass 9 billion persons by 2050,
according to the newly released 2006 Revision of the official United Nations
population estimates and projections, which also predict that the number of
elderly persons will hit 1 billion.
"One of the surprises is that population growth is most concentrated in
the 60 plus age group," Hania Zlotnik, the Director of the UN Population
Division, told a press briefing on March 13, 2007 in New York held to launch
the report.
"The place where the action is is the older population," she said.
"The biggest change will occur in the developing world, and developing
countries will have to cope with the situation" by investing in both
education and care of the elderly.
According to the 2006 Revision, the world population will likely increase by
2.5 billion over the next 43 years, passing from the current 6.7 billion to 9.2
billion in 2050. This increase is equivalent to the total size of the world
population in 1950, and it will be absorbed mostly by the less developed regions,
whose population is projected to rise from 5.4 billion in 2007 to 7.9 billion
in 2050.
In contrast, the population of the more developed regions is expected to remain
largely unchanged at 1.2 billion, and would have declined were it not for the
projected net migration from developing to developed countries, which is
expected to average 2.3 million persons annually.
As a result of declining fertility
and increasing longevity, the populations of more and more countries are ageing
rapidly. Between 2005 and 2050, half of the increase in the world population
will be accounted for by a rise in the population aged 60 years or over,
whereas the number of children (persons under age 15) will decline slightly.
Furthermore, in the more developed regions, the population aged 60 or over is
expected nearly to double (from 245 million in 2005 to 406 million in 2050),
whereas that of persons under age 60 will likely decline (from 971 million in
2005 to 839 million in 2050).
"The world population is ageing because of the great success in reducing
population, the success of humanity in controlling its numbers," Ms.
Zlotnik observed.
According to the 2006 Revision, fertility in the less developed countries as a
whole is expected to drop from 2.75 children per woman in 2005-2010 to 2.05 in
2045-2050. To achieve such reductions, it is essential that access to family
planning expands in the poorest countries, the Population Division said,
pointing out that without this, the world population could increase by twice as
many people as those alive in 1950.
Reacting to the findings, the Executive Director of the UN Population Fund, Ms
Thoraya Ahmed Obaid said they serve as a wake-up call to the urgency of giving
couples the means to exercise their human right to freely determine the sizes
of their families.
"Currently, about 200 million women in these countries lack access to safe
and effective contraceptive services," said Ms. Obaid in a news release.
"Funding for family planning must be increased to meet the needs of these
women, not only to determine the world's future, but also to prevent unintended
pregnancies and reduce maternal and infant death."
ICYO- Platform of 356 Youth Organizations in India
ICYO - India’s largest network of urban and rural youth
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit, non-governmental
network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual cooperation and
understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth groups, clubs and
individuals working in the field of youth welfare in India.
ICYO functions as an umbrella organization
of youth NGOs in India. It's family consists of over 356 organizations spread
in 122 districts of 22 states from different corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work and services through
Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative
(Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia
Doctors, Care-Givers Must Report Cases In Bill Covering Sex Tourism
New Delhi: A new legislation to protect child rights will soon make it compulsory for doctors, teachers, social workers and other care-givers to report cases of child abuse to the authorities. The Offences Against Child Bill that is in the drafting stage will cover aspects of sexual, emotional, physical and mental abuse in a comprehensive manner setting out stringent punishments for offenders.
The proposed legislation gains significance in the light of the Nithari serial killings where the ministry of women and child development (WCD) felt that the existing laws were inadequate to recognise and penalise the offenders. “The legislation will provide the authorities with a mechanism to identify and punish offenders for crimes against children,’’ a senior official said.
One of the key clauses of the proposed law will be compulsory reporting by doctors, NGO workers, teachers and others who are in constant touch with children in juvenile homes, schools and shelters. Officials and civil society consultations revealed that there was inadequate protection for abuse of boys. This has led to an increase in paedophile tourism in the country.
“There are laws related to rape of girls but the rules of evidence and inordinate delay in prosecution often lead to vital evidence being missed and to hostile witnesses,’’ a source added.
Officials said the lacunae in the existing laws have to be addressed with the children’s interest in mind.
Existing legislation do not recognise sex tourism, grooming of child for sexual purposes, violence against children, emotional abuse or instances like intentionally starving a child or transmitting a life-threatening disease to a child. The bill will also tackle unlawful sexual contact, using children for begging, abduction and wrongful detention, using children for pornography, corporal punishment, ragging, intimidation, intoxicating children, abetting and involving children in armed conflict.
This legislation will be supplemented by the Integrated Child Protection Scheme (ICPS) which has received Rs 90 crore in the Union budget. The scheme prepared by the ministry has a rightsbased approach for the protection of children. (Himanshi Dhawan | TNN/ Times of India 14/3/2007)
-=-=-=-
The Indian Network for Combat Trafficking (INCT) is the wider platform where all civil society organizations can come together and discuss problems, voice their opinions and work coherently as a team to combat trafficking (prevention, rescue, repatriation, rehabilitation), to end the sexual exploitation and abuse of children and women.
(E
- newsletter from network of Indian youth organizations)
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India Young, But Not the Youngest Nation
Rema
Nagarajan | TIG
New Delhi: Much has been made of
India’s large young population. Nearly 70% of India’s population is younger
than 35 years and reams have been written about how young India is. Yet, it is
nowhere near having the lowest median age in the world. The list of countries with the lowest median age
is dominated almost entirely by Africa, although it is for all the wrong
reasons. A look at the life expectancy in most of the African nations provides
a clue as to why they are the youngest countries.
Very high prevalence of HIV/AIDS in many African countries,
particularly in the south, seems to be taking a heavy toll. Few African
countries have an average life expectancy beyond 50 years. In fact, of the 10
countries that form the southernmost part of the African mainland, seven have
an average life expectancy of 40 years or less. In the case of Swaziland, it’s
as low as 32.6 years.
The
others have a life expectancy of just a little above 40, the highest being
Namibia with 43.4 years. With a few among the population living beyond their 40s,
it’s no wonder that the median age of these countries are the lowest in the
world—ranging from 15 years in Uganda to 18.6 in Rwanda.
In
fact, 41 of the 50 youngest countries in the world are African, but again, in
most cases this is essentially due to a very low average life expectancy. Since
having a young population—because most die before they even attain middle
age—cannot be an advantage, it’s better to compare countries which have a life
expectancy of at least 60 years.
Even by this yardstick, however, India is nowhere near being
the youngest nation. Of the 215 nations for which data on both median age and
life expectancy is available, there are 47 which have a life expectancy of
above 60 and a median age lower than India’s 24.9 years.
Many
of these are very small nations like Sao Tome and Principe or Mayotte, but the
list includes several not-so-small countries like Oman, Iraq, Pakistan,
Tajikistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Cambodia, Syria and Nicaragua—all with median ages
ranging from 19 to 21 years. India’s median age is much above Bangladesh’s 22.2
or Egypt’s 24. In fact, most countries in West Asia and in Central America are
part of the list of countries with lower median ages than India, and reasonably
high life expectancy.
When
it comes to countries with the highest median age,there are few surprises.
Japan has the second highest median age of 42.9 years, next only to Monaco with
45.4. Japan’s life expectancy is the highest in the world at 81.25. It is
followed by Germany, Italy and several Scandinavian countries. The UK has a
median age of 39.3 with a life expectancy of 78.54 and the US has a median age
of 36.5 and life expectancy of 77.85.
Indian Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a
registered non-profit, non-governmental network organization, committed in
developing areas of mutual cooperation and understanding among different youth
voluntary agencies, youth groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of
youth welfare in India.
ICYO
functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family
consists of over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from
different corners of India.
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee
member of World Bank's YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia.
“Bottom-up Approach" to Curtail Human Trafficking, Including Awareness-Raising Campaigns at the Local-level.
- Asha-Rose Migiro, Deputy Secretary-General, United Nations
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
UN Officials Press for Urgent Action to End Human Trafficking, a 'Modern-Day Slave Trade'
5 March 2007 – United Nations officials today called for increased efforts – by Governments, civil society, law enforcement agencies, the private sector and international organizations including the UN – to curb human trafficking, especially in women and girls.
Although this year marks the bicentennial of the end of the trans-Atlantic slave trade, "the fact that there are forms of slavery in our world today should fill us all with shame," Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro told delegates from around the world who converged at UN Headquarters in New York to attend the International Conference on Trafficking in Women and Girls. "As an African woman, I would add that it also fills me with rage."
She advocated increased cooperation among Governments, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and the media, among other groups, to halt trafficking, prosecute those guilty of perpetrating such crimes and to protect victims.
Ms. Migiro also urged States to join the Global Initiative to fight Human Trafficking and Modern Slavery, a new UN program which will be launched later this year in Vienna. "We must act together to stop a crime in our midst that deprives countless victims of their liberty, dignity and human rights."
Citing trafficking's global scope, General Assembly President Sheikha Haya Rashed Al Khalifa said that it impacts millions of people, particularly those in poor countries, and is a multi-billion dollar industry that lines the pockets of organized crime.
"I cannot imagine a more terrible crime than the sale of women and children to be exploited and abused by others," Sheikha Haya told the Conference's participants. She lauded strengthened international legal instruments, such as the 2000 Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking, Especially Women and Children, which entered into force on 25 December 2003, and said that such agreements must be applied effectively.
Also, Sheikha Haya suggested a "bottom-up approach" to curtail human trafficking, including awareness-raising campaigns at the local-level, having vulnerable groups join in discussions on finding solutions to the problem and improving local economies to prevent "risky migration practices."
Indian Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit, non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in India.
ICYO functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family consists of over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work and services through Youth Organizations; To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society; To promote effective youth programmmes; To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the development of youth work; To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings; To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in their programmes and activities
Affiliation: Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations; Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development; Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC); Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand; ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's YDP Network; Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD); International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO); Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD); World Youth Foundation, Malaysia.
UNITED NATIONS -- A 16-year-old Nepalese girl burst into tears describing her work in a match factory to help support her mother. A Jordanian teen spoke out about violence against girls in rural areas. A former child soldier from Congo cried when she recalled her suffering as a sex slave.
The three are among more than 200 young people attending a high-level meeting of the U.N. Commission on the Status of Women, which this year is focusing on discrimination and violence against girls. They spoke at a panel and a news conference about issues that concern them, ranging from rape, trafficking and prostitution to education, child labor and AIDS.
"The most important message is that governments should ensure that every working child gets a free education," said Sunita Tamang, lamenting that in her community in Nepal "people think that if you educate a girl child, it will only embarrass you."
There was a time, she said tearfully, when she couldn't go to school because she had to work to help her mother, a single parent. But now, through a program supported by the U.N. children's agency, UNICEF, she attends classes in the morning and works in the factory making boxes for matches in the afternoon.
In her spare time, Tamang started a club with other working children to campaign for education for youngsters who have to work and for an end to violence against children.
"What is unachievable if given an opportunity?" she asked at the crowded panel session. "Look at me _ I work in a match factory and today I have been able to come here and share my feelings and experiences with you all."
Golfidan Khader Al Abassy, 18, of Jordan, described the discrimination against girls in families, schools and in the workplace in her country and the shortage of programs that focus on girls' participation.
"I hope it will be in the near future that we will have the same opportunities as boys," she said. "The most important message which I want to send for all over the world ... (is) that the girls have a lot of power ... so if we give them the chance to prove themselves, they will be great persons. ... We have to believe in them."
Madeleine _ whose last name was withheld for security reasons _ was recruited at age 11 into the Mai-Mai militia, a ragtag group of impoverished fighters with varying loyalties who operate across huge swaths of eastern Congo. She spent two years with the militia, fighting on the front lines, and was demobilized in 2004.
At Friday's panel, she urged the international community to bring those responsible for crimes against girl soldiers in Congo to justice.
"We regret we were forgotten by those who should help us in doing justice to us, especially regarding the unusual sexual exploitation that we endured, which was merely sexual slavery," the 15-year-old said.
"We regret the International Criminal Court has not so far taken into account this aspect which would help ease our pain," she said.
So far only one Congolese warlord has been ordered to stand trial before the war crimes tribunal on a charge of sending children into battle.
Chinyanta Chimba, 17, raised by a single mother in Zambia who was determined that she go to school even if it meant no food on the table, is president of the Student Alliance for Female Education, a school club that seeks to change negative cultural and traditional practices and educate girls about HIV/AIDS, reproductive health and child rights.
"The main thing I would say to all the girls out there is that they should know that they have their own rights and it is time that we all stand up as young girls and speak out," she said.
Chimba said there has been "great encouragement" for the girls from the older participants at the two-week conference, which has brought 6,000 men and women to U.N. headquarters from around the globe.
She said she had believed women would never stand up for their rights, "but looking at what is happening today, it really gives me courage."
"I've got two ambitions," Chimba told the news conference. "The first one is to be a doctor ... and the second ambition is I want to become the first-ever female secretary-general of the U.N."
Journalists, diplomats and U.N. staffers in the room burst into applause. (PUSH Journal)
Indian Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit, non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in India.
ICYO functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family consists of over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work and services through Youth Organizations; To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society; To promote effective youth programmmes; To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the development of youth work; To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings; To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in their programmes and activities
Affiliation: Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations; Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development; Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC); Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand; ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's YDP Network; Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD); International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO); Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD); World Youth Foundation, Malaysia.
(E
- newsletter from network of Indian youth organizations)
==========================================
AIDSCAREWATCHMonitor
TB Alert
Issue 24
MARCH 2007
From the Campaign Trail
TB ANYWHERE IS TB EVERYWHERE
By,
Stop TB Partnership, March 2007
TB ANYWHERE IS TB
EVERYWHERE is the theme for 2007 World TB Day, March 24th, offering a message
of urgency and shared responsibility. Through unified action on all levels, we
can work towards a world finally free of tuberculosis.
The 2007 theme TB
ANYWHERE IS TB EVERYWHERE emphasizes that although TB is a preventable and
curable disease, it remains a global emergency. The theme reflects the
chronically inadequate investment in TB control, surveillance, research and
development as well as TB's deadly synergy with HIV. more...
Feature Story
Humanity's formidable enemy
By,
Belinda Bereseford, Mail & Guardian Online, January 15, 2007
Mycobacterium tuberculosis is the “mother
of all pathogens”, able to create all its essential nutrients, eat its own cell
wall without dying, and hide within the cells sent to kill it for decades.
Under various names, including the “white plague” and consumption, TB has been
around for thousands of years, with Egyptian mummies showing traces of it. A
third of humankind is estimated to be infected by the bacillus, which is
thought to kill two million people a year, with a new TB infection occurring
every second. Yet humanity confronts this talented adversary with inadequate
diagnostic tests a century old, a poor vaccination developed 70 years ago, and
drugs at least 35 years old. more...
Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis epidemic may be larger
than previously thought By, Joe Santangelo, Lancet, December
20, 2006
The epidemic of
multidrug-resistant (MDR) tuberculosis (TB) may be larger than previously
suspected, according to an Article in The Lancet. The study found anti-TB drug
resistance in virtually all of the 79 countries surveyed, with particularly
high levels in areas of the former Soviet Union and some provinces of China.
About a third of the world’s population is infected with Mycobacterium
tuberculosis, 8.9 million people develop the disease annually, and in 2004, 1.7
million deaths occurred. The emergence of drug-resistant strains occurs with
the wide misuse of antimicrobials. MDR-TB is defined as resistance to at least
the two most potent anti-TB drugs, isoniazid and rifampicin. In 1994, the
Global Project on Anti-Tuberculosis Drug Resistance Surveillance was set up to
determine the prevalence, patterns, and trends of anti-TB drug resistance
around the world. more...
New diagnostics help fight tuberculosis - FIND and Hain
Lifescience Plan Worldwide Demonstration Projects
By,
Medical News Today, January 14, 2007
The Foundation for Innovative New
Diagnostics (FIND) and Hain Lifescience (Hain) announced today that the Hain
"GenoType® MTBDR plus" test, a new improved molecular test for
multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB), has been approved in Europe and that
they have signed an agreement to begin large-scale demonstration projects of
the test in high burden countries. The announcement came just two months after
an initial agreement between FIND and Hain Lifescience to fast-track the
development of a new tool to address the recent outbreaks of MDR-TB and
extensively drug resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB). In the case of MDR-TB, the
TB-bacilli are resistant to rifampicin and isoniazid, two of the most important
drugs used to treat TB. XDR-TB organisms are also resistant to at least three
"second-line" TB drugs used when "first-line" treatment has
failed. more...
Spotlight
Photovoice raises TB awareness in Thailand
By,
Masimba Biriwasha, HDN Key Correspondent, March 1, 2007
A community project in northern Thailand
named ‘TB Photovoice Thailand’ is using photos and stories to tackle often
hidden issues surrounding TB and HIV infection, diagnosis, treatment and coping
strategies. The project is proving that a picture can indeed speak a thousand
words, but even more than that, it can help influence social change. more...
ACW Alert
Race to accelerate tuberculosis drug development
By,
www.news-medical.net, January 14, 2007
Each year, tuberculosis kills nearly two
million people while an estimated nine million develop the disease -- with the
hardest-hit areas in AIDS-afflicted developing nations. One of the most
pressing challenges is the increase in drug-resistant TB. more...
Real Speak
XDR-TB in South Africa
By,
news-medical.net, January 23, 2007
A team of medical ethics and public health
experts say tough isolation measures, involuntary if need be, are justified to
contain a deadly, contagious, drug-resistant strain of TB in South Africa and
to prevent "a potentially explosive international health crisis." In
a policy paper in the international health journal PLoS Medicine, Dr Jerome
Singh of the Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in Durban, South Africa
(who is also an Adjunct Professor at the Joint Centre for Bioethics, University
of Toronto) and colleagues say that "the forced isolation and confinement
of extensively drug resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) and multiple drug resistant
tuberculosis (MDR-TB) infected individuals may be a proportionate response in
defined situations given the extreme risk posed."
more...
Glossary
Tuberculosis: An infectious disease caused by the
bacillus Mycobacterium tuberculosis. It is primarily an infection of the lungs,
but any organ system is susceptible, so its manifestations may be varied.
Effective therapy and methods of control and prevention of tuberculosis have
been developed, but the disease remains a major cause of mortality and
morbidity throughout the world. The treatment of tuberculosis has been
complicated by the emergence of drug-resistant organisms, including
multiple-drug-resistant tuberculosis, especially in those with HIV infection. more...
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit,
non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual
cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth
groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in
India.
ICYO
functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family
consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work and services through
Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia
ØYouth
Participation increased to end Commercial Sexual Exploitation and Abuse of
Children
ØNew
World Bank Country Director meets the representatives of Youth Organizations
Ø45
Per cent of Indian girls married off before 18
ØCall
for greater Youth Participation to Combat Climate Change, Commonwealth
Ministers say
ØLiteracy
drive for tribal girls
ØCreating
awareness on HIV/AIDS and TB: NGOs meeting cum workshop held in Delhi
ØTheme of Women’s Day: ‘Ending Impunity for Violence Against
Women’
ØIndian
President to inaugurate Commonwealth ICT Summit
ØWinning
student essayists to participate in Regional Youth Forum
ØMr.
Karayil Sukumaran nominated in Regional cell of Gramin Vikas Andolan
Upcoming
Events:
ØWorld
Bank’s Youth Essay Competition on Corruption
ØSymposium
– The Youth Parliament
ØRegional Meet of Trafficking Survivors
ØInt.
Leadership Camp
Ø4th
World Youth Congress
ØRegional
Training Programme in Peace Building & Development
ICYO – Youth
Information Newsletter
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations
March 2007 No. 11
Platform of 356 Youth Organizations in India
India’s largest network of urban and rural youth
Rise in Youth
Participation to End Commercial Sexual Exploitation and Abuse of Children
The First
World Congress against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children (CESC) was
held at Stockholm, Sweden in 1996, since than governments, civil society
organizations and people has more awareness, many laws in place, National
Action Plans (NPA) developed. On other side the Commercial Sexual Exploitation
of Children (CESC) and Commercial Sexual Abuse of children (CSA) are on rise.
ECPAT International has analyzed the ten years work progress
and published the country ‘Monitoring Reports’ worldwide. In this series, the
four south Asian country (Nepal, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Pakistan) reports
were launched in Kathamandu, Nepal on February 8, 2007.
The large
numbers of programmes and activities to fight against CESC are underway but
most significant is the increase of ‘youth participation’ in such activities,
said Mr. Mark Capaldi, Deputy Director, ECPAT International whilelaunching the Reports. According to Mr.
Capaldi ‘Global Monitoring Report on the status of action against Commercial
Sexual Exploitation of Children’ will help in developing National Action Plan
and further strengthen it.
The Report provides a baseline of information on actions
taken and remaining gaps for addressing CSEC, in each country based on the
framework of the Agenda of Action against CESC, to enable more systematic
assessment of progress implementation of the commitment.
Dr Tufail
Mohammed, ECPAT Board Member (South Asia) said that the trafficking of children
for sexual exploitation is a pressing problem in Asia and this region
constitutes both destination and transit countries.
Earlier,
Ms Junita Upadhyay, Focal Person for South Asia of ECPAT Int welcomed the
guests. Mr. Biswo Khadka, Director, Maiti Nepal and Mr. Gauri Pradhan,
Chairperson, CWIN also presented his views on the occasion.
The event
was attended by media persons, representative of various international and
national NGOs from Nepal, representatives of ECPAT member/affiliate
organizations from South Asia.
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) represented by its Secretary General
Mr. Ravi Narayan.
New
World Bank Country Director Meet the
Representatives of Youth Organizations
Mr. Praful Patel, World
Bank’s Regional Vice President for South Asia, announced the appointment of Ms.
sabel Guerrero as the new Country Director for India. Ms. Guerrero will
formally assume office on March 1, 2007 but she visited India in second week of
February. On February 13, 2007 she invited the representatives of Youth
Organizations in World Bank office in New Delhi.
In this information
meeting all the NGO representatives including Mr.Ravi Narayan from
ICYO gave the detail abouttheir
work. Ms Guerrero also discusses various issue related to young people. Mr.
Philip O’Keefe moderated the meeting.
45 Per cent of
Indian Girls Married off Before 18
It's a
social ill that continues to shame India. Nearly 45 per cent of women in India,
aged between 20 and 24, are married off before they reach 18, the legal age to
marry. What's worse, the number is over 50 per cent in eight states.
While
61 per cent of women in Jharkhand were married off before 18, the number stood
at 60 per cent in Bihar, 57 per cent in Rajasthan, 55 per cent in Andhra
Pradesh, 53 per cent each in Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal and
52 per cent in Chhattisgarh.
Lack of
education was found to be a major factor fuelling this trend. Over 71 per cent
of women who got married below the age of 18 had received no education.
These are part of the findings of the latest National
Family Health Survey-III, carried out in 29 states during 2005-06.
The
survey, conducted by 18 research organizations, including five population
research centres, and designed to collect and provide vital information on
population, family planning, maternal and child health, child survival, nutrition
of children and status of women, also unmasks another worrying trend. Six
states — Arunachal Pradesh, Punjab, Mizoram, Sikkim, Tripura and West Bengal —
which reported a lower percentage of under-18 marriages among women during the
NFHS-II survey conducted in 1998-99, show an upward trend in NFHS-III.
Officials say more and more women in these six states are being married off at
the age of 15.
Call for Greater Youth Participation to Combat Climate
Change,
Commonwealth Ministers Say
Education
on climate change at all levels is key, Commonwealth environment ministers say
at 13th Commonwealth Consultative Group on Environment meeting.
Young
people need to be more involved in the climate change issues, Commonwealth
environment ministers have said. Ministers called for greater participation of
the youth in international policy debates around climate change issues at a
meeting at the United Nations Environment Programme headquarters in Gigiri,
Nairobi, on 5 February 2007.
"Ministers
felt that it was important for young people to be present at international
meetings to share their views on an issue that will be a critical concern for
their generation," Dr Indrajit Coomaraswamy, Director of the Commonwealth
Secretariat's Economic Affairs Division, said.
"They
also stated that young people could develop relevant skills through direct
involvement in technical workshops, and that all of this would help to bring
greater continuity and resilience in approaches to climate change."
Ministers
agreed that strengthening education on climate change at all levels would help
societies to address the challenges.
They
asked the Commonwealth to develop a focused and sustained capacity-building
programme to address the needs of developing countries.
Environment
officials also saw a role for the Commonwealth in examining the policy concerns
of developing countries, in particular in helping to ensure that small states
and least developed countries are not marginalized in future climate change
negotiations.
Literacy
Drive for Tribal Girls
Only
34.7 per cent tribal women are literate and that is far below the India’s
national average of 54 per cent and fifty-four districts with a tribal
population of over 25 per cent and where female literacy levels are below 35
per cent were selected for the literacy drive.
The
government of Indian plans to come out with a special package to improve
literacy levels among tribal women. The plan envisages setting up of 'district
education support agencies in tribal areas with low literacy levels to ensure
that tribal girls go to school. The volunteers would meet the families of
tribal to convince them about the need to send their children to school.
Creating
Awareness on HIV/AIDS and TB:
NGOs
Meeting cum Workshop held in Delhi
The TB Association of India organized the NGOs meeting cum
workshop on February 20, 2007 in New Delhi with the theme ‘Creating Awareness
on HIV/AIDS and TB’.
Ms Maya Singh, Member of Rajya Sabha inaugurated the
meeting. She emphasized for active role of civil society organization to
eradicate the TB. Dr R. P. Vashit, State TB Officer informed that 40 per cent
population has the TB virus in the body therefore need of continue programme to
check the TB virus and need of complete course of treatment for TB patients.
ICYO attended the meeting.
Theme
of Women’s Day:
‘Ending
Impunity for Violence Against Women’
A working group of representatives from UN agencies and
offices in Bangkok will present the 2007 observance of International Women’s
Day on 8 March in Bangkok. The 2007 theme, ‘Ending Impunity for Violence
Against Women,’ highlights the critical need to create and maintain a political
and social environment in which violence against women is not tolerated. It
also emphasizes the particular importance of political will and the involvement
of men to achieve this goal. According to the UN, violence against women is a
significant cause of death and disability among women aged 16 to 44. One in
five women will be a victim of rape or attempted rape in her lifetime. The
Beijing Declaration and Platform for Actionincludes violence
against women as one of 12 critical areas of concern requiring urgent
action towards attaining the goals of equality, development and peace. It
states that violence against women is a violation of women’s human rights and
an impediment to the full enjoyment by women of all human rights.
(UNESACP NEWS)
Indian
President to Inaugurate Commonwealth ICT Summit
Indian
President Dr A P J Abdul Kalam is scheduled to inaugurate a major Commonwealth
summit in New Delhi. On 23 March 2007, President Kalam will kick off the
Commonwealth Connects International e-Partnership Summit, a global information
and communication technology (ICT) event.
Winning
Student Essayists to Participate in Regional Youth Forum
Twenty-five
university students from 15 ADB member economies will participate in the Asian
and Pacific Youth Forum on Sustainable Development, which will take place in
Kyoto, Japan on 17 March. The students submitted winning essays to a
region-wide essay competition on sustainable development held between September
and November 2006. The competition generated more than 600 essay submissions,
and was sponsored by ADB and ROAD, a network of Japanese university students
concerned about development issues, through ADB's Japan Special Fund, financed
by the Government of Japan.
Mr.
Karayil Sukumaran nominated in
Regional Cell of Gramin Vikas Andolan
Mr.Karayil Sukumaran, Secretaryof Karayil Yuvajana Kalasamithi, Payyannur, Kerala has nominated as the
member of the CAPART regional cellfor implementing the Gramin Vikas Andolan programme.
The Gramin vikas Andolan is aiming at
awareness generation at all levels, the convergence of all other programmes of
Government of India particularly those of the Ministry of Rural Development
would enhance the ultimate output and lead to sustainable economic development
of the rural community.
The central cell, regional cell and the
selected NGOs should take all measures at the respective level such as
National, state, district, block to ensure convergence of programmes of similar
nature.
Mr Sukumaran is also the board member of
ICYO.
Upcoming Events:
World Bank’s Youth Essay
Competition on Corruption
2007
International Youth Essay Competition on corruption organized by the World Bank
and the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs invites the submission the essay
from all over the world. The essay competition is open to students and
non-students alike, aged 18-25. The last date of submission is March 15, 2007.
For detail information and participation log on
http://www.essaycompetition.org/content07_36_1
Symposium
– The Youth Parliament
A grand
Youth Symposium – The Youth Parliament will be organized at IIT Roorkee during
Cognizance’07, the annual techfest of IIT Roorkee at 23rd – 24th March 2007.
The aim
behind the symposium is to give the youth a platform to express their views and
thoughts on the issues and to invite suggestions from their side, which in turn
will lead to the formation of Prabuddha and Samartha Bharat,
The
topic of the Symposium includes:
1.
" India 's first vision dates back to 1857, the vision of a free and
independent India , the vision that guided the anti-colonial movement and made
India independent in 1947. India then joined the list of the developing nations
and needed a second vision urgently to become a developed nation. "
2. Is
there a need of another vision or revolution which leads to a radical change in
our thought process, policymaking and self-actualization or are we progressing
steadily towards development? If you believe in the former option, what will be
that vision (in respect of the common man / youth) and the path ? If it's the
latter, how can the youth accelerate the growth towards a developed and free
India ?"
For
more details log on www.iitr.ernet.in/Symposium
Regional Meet of
Trafficking Survivors
The NATSAP & VIMUKTHI ( Vimukthi is a VOCSET CBO)
is planning to conduct a Regional level meet with 250 VOCSET -
Victims of Commercial Sexual Exploitation & Trafficking at Vijayawada in AP
on 8th March20 07 on the eve of "International Women's Day". The
organizer expected the representative of VOCSET from coastal
and Rayalaseem region districts of Andhra Pradesh in the meeting. The
State level police officers, officers of Women and child welfare dept, Local
MPs, & MLAs will also be invited to participate in this
programme.
The agenda of discussion includes: to continue section 8
(with small changes) & 20 of ITPA; to make an amendment to the ITPA by
adding a new clause " Traffickers shall pay the compensation to the
Victims" and sealing of the properties of traffickers; issue of Identity
cards; deriving support and collaboration of from Police and Dist Admn for
rescuing minors and women from trafficking.
The 3rd
International Leadership camp will be held from April 18-28, 2007 in Dumaguete
City, Philippines. The theme of the camp is "Reuniting the World's Youth
of Today for a Safer and Better Tomorrow"
The
purpose of this leadership camp is to create avenues for participants to be
trained as a leader/agent of change. Holistic leadership training is one where
the training targets are both cognitive and effective. It is likewise oriented
to developing appropriate skills and for formation of relevant values and
attitudes.
Saceda Youth Lead and National Youth Commission, Philippines
will organize the camp. For more detail contact:
sacedaleadership@...
4th World Youth Congress
The 4th
World Youth Congress on the theme “Youth-led Development” will bring together
600 world’s most dynamic young activists in the field of sustainable
development, in order to demonstrate that young people are one of the most
valuable resources in governments’ and international development organizations’
mission to reach the Millennium Development Goals.
The
Congress will organize by Peace Child International, World Youth Congress 2008
and Taking It Global (TIG) in Quebec, Canada from August 10 – 21, August 2007.
Regional
Training Programme in Peace Building & Development
The
Peacebuilding & Development Regional Training Programme provides practical
experience and skills for scholars and practitioners working in conflict and
post-conflict environments in South and Southeast Asia.
The
Training progamme will be organized by Peace building & Development
Institute in Sri Lanka in Partnership with American University’s Peacebuilding
& Development Institute in Washington, DC. The programme will start from
April 23, 2007. Participants
choose from one of two training sessions offered weekly, and are encouraged to
attend as many weeks as possible. The second week training session will be on
Youth and Conflict.
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit,
non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual
cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth
groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in
India.
ICYO functions
as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work and services through
Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia
It's India's largest survey on child abuse. And it says half of our children are victims.
Anuradha Raman
'50% Children Abused'
These are the key findings from the survey conducted by the child and welfare department, the Delhi-based NGO Prayas and funded by the UNICEF. The survey, the largest of its kind in the world, is slated for release in March.
These are the different categories of abuse covered by the survey:
-Emotional abuse: When a girl child is constantly ill-treated for not being born a male. Or any child pulled up for non-performance in school.
- Sexual abuse: Extends from fondling to rape
- Physical abuse: Force used against a child by teachers, parents and others
- Economic abuse: Forced labour in both hazardous and non-hazardous places of work
The horrific Nithari murders in Noida near Delhi—scores of children abused and then murdered—is perhaps an extreme case. But the scourge of child abuse is very real. Hidden from the media glare, millions of children suffer abuse in silence. Outlook has got exclusive access to the largest survey on child abuse ever conducted in India. The findings of the study, to be officially released next month, are, to say the least, mind-numbing.
The survey, a joint venture between UNICEF, the Union department of women and child development (DWCD) and the Delhi-based NGO, Prayas, has taken a year to complete. As many as 16,800 children below the age of 18, and close to 5,000 young adults in 13 states, were taken into confidence to understand the extent of abuse. Working children, street children, children under institutional care and children within the confines of their family were spoken to.
The broad findings of the survey are disturbing. Till now it was assumed that child abuse was rampant only in juvenile homes, orphanages or among street children. But the survey proves that child abuse cuts across economic, social, religious and class barriers. Here are some of the startling findings:
-Close to 50 per cent of the respondents spoken to have suffered some form of abuse or the other.
- 25 per cent of the children have suffered sexual abuse, more often at the hands of family members or persons known to the victims. In more than 30 per cent of the cases, relatives of the child are involved.
-More than 40 per cent of the children have faced corporal punishment.
-At least five per cent of the respondents have resorted to substance abuse to cope with the sexual or physical trauma they were routinely subjected to.
The figures for the nation's capital are particularly depressing. Close to 25 per cent children surveyed in Delhi admitted to some form of sexual abuse. Nearly 71 per cent have been physically beaten by persons in positions of authority. In more than 56 per cent of the cases, the beating resulted in bleeding and 29 per cent needed medical attention. As for malicious emotional abuse, the figure for Delhi shoots up to 80 per cent.
The survey's findings should serve as a wake-up call for the government which has taken more than a decade to frame laws to protect children.
The findings are expected to pave the way for an effective implementation of the integrated child protection scheme which is currently in operation. For the purpose of the survey, child abuse has been defined in various categories. Emotional abuse, when a child is discriminated against purely for being of the less privileged gender (i.e. a girl) or for being a non-performer; sexual abuse which may extend from fondling to outright rape; economic abuse, defined as forced labour in both hazardous and non-hazardous places of work; and physical abuse when force is frequently used against a child by teachers, parents or other adults.
Since India is home to 19 per cent of the world's children, the government made it a point to spread the sample group across all sections of society. And that's when many unsavoury truths tumbled out. Our children, it seems, can be subjected to abuse in places where they are assumed to be safe—in playgrounds, schools and worst, at home. Arun Pandey of the NGO Anyway Rahit Zindagi in Goa says that child abuse has always been pervasive. "The only reason why people are talking about it now is because society is beginning to see children as victims and is making an attempt to reach out to them." The DWCD too quite candidly admits that issues like neglect, abuse and exploitation of children have not been addressed adequately.
Protecting children has never been high on the nation's priorities. The allocation for children in the national budget has always been measly. The share of funds for children in three key areas—education, nutrition, protection—in the Union budgets for the last two years has been less than 5 per cent of the total outlay. Child protection gets a mere 0.034 per cent of this. In rupee terms, this amounts to as little as Rs 3.76 spent on each child.
But the DWCD is now making the right noises to get children their due attention. A report on the integrated child protection scheme, prepared in December last year, states there is an urgent case for increasing expenditure on child protection. The draft says that the neglect of child protection issues not only violates the rights of the children but also increases their vulnerability to abuse. The department is also asking for Rs 2,000 crore under the Eleventh Plan for a proposed protection scheme for children.
Among the recommendations in the integrated child protection scheme, priority has been given to establishing preventive measures to reduce child neglect, abuse and vulnerability; providing professional child protection services and creating a mechanism for monitoring and social audit. An advanced child tracking system to monitor cases of missing children is also being sought to be put in place with the help of the UNICEF.
But social activists say that's not enough. Activist-advocate Ashok Aggarwal says that it should be mandatory to put every child rescued from forced labour or brothels into government-aided schools with hostels so that they can be integrated with the society. Says he: "I think it is high time the government began to really protect children instead of spending money on remand homes from where they usually escape to return to the very world from which they were rescued."
Hopefully, in a few weeks from now, when the survey is made public, there will be some introspection on
the lives of those who will shape India's future. Those who have worked on the survey are certain a debate will begin on a legal framework to protect children. Yet the stark truth is that in a country so large and short on resources, many children will remain as vulnerable as they were on the day they were born.
(Outlook/26Feb2007)
-=-=-=-
The Indian Network for Combat Trafficking (INCT) is the wider platform where all civil society organizations can come together and discuss problems, voice their opinions and work coherently as a team to combat trafficking (prevention, rescue, repatriation, rehabilitation), to end the sexual exploitation and abuse of children and women.
Nearly half of Indian women have not heard of AIDS
By Kamil Zaheer
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - More than 40 percent of women in India have not heard of AIDS, according to a government survey that has alarmed activists.
India has 5.7 million people living with HIV/AIDS, according to the United Nations, which is the world's highest caseload. But the prevalence rate, in the country of 1.1 billion people, is much lower than in most of Africa.
The National Family Health Survey (NFHS), the most extensive study on health and nutrition in India, said in its latest report only 57 percent of women have heard of AIDS.
In rural areas, where most Indians live, less than half the women -- 46 percent -- were aware of the disease.
Activists said on Friday that poor awareness among women was fuelling the epidemic.
"This shows women don't have access to information, translating into more women getting infected," said Anjali Gopalan, head of Naz Foundation India, a leading anti-AIDS group.
In the past few years, there has been a growing "feminisation" of the epidemic in India with nearly 40 percent of all those infected now being women, including housewives.
Biologically, women are more susceptible to HIV," said Christy Abraham of ActionAid-India. "The lack of awareness adds to the HIV threat they face."
One reason for low awareness is that the government has focused prevention efforts on high-risk groups like prostitutes and intravenous drug users, rather than on the general population.
"But we are expanding prevention efforts among the general population in rural areas, especially women, over the next five years," a government official said on condition of anonymity.
Many rural women have been infected by their husbands who work in the cities and visit prostitutes. Stigma stops infected husbands from telling their wives they are HIV-positive.
The NFHS survey, supported by UNICEF as well as the British and U.S. governments, shows a gulf in awareness between men and women, with 80 percent of men having heard of the disease.
Only 54 percent of Indian women are literate compared with 76 percent for men.
Many women in villages do not have television in their homes and miss out on anti-AIDS advertisements, say activists, calling for a broad-based effort to educate and empower women.
"Even if they do have TVs, there is no electricity in many areas. This is one way how fighting HIV is linked to the issue of general development," Abraham said.
Activists want the government to spend more training and sending grassroot health workers to spread AIDS education among women, especially in poorer and highly populated states.
In the eastern state of Bihar -- home to 85 million people -- only 35 percent of women have heard of AIDS, with the level of awareness falling to 30 percent in villages. --------- An eFORUM for communication and information on HIV& AIDS related issues in India. The views are of the authors. Please feel free to copy the messages. An acknowledgement [Source: AIDS-INDIA eFORUM] would be appreciated. To Post a message:E-mail to: aids-india@yahoogroups.com
(E
- newsletter from network of Indian youth organizations)
==========================================
Call for nomination:
Tunza International Youth
Conferences
The TUNZA International Youth
Conference has the vision of the organization to "foster a generation of
environmentally conscious citizens who will better influence decision-making
processes and act responsibly to create a sustainable world".
The TUNZA International Youth Conference
will be organized by UNEP in Liverkusen, Germany from August 26-30, 2007.
The Conferences (for young people between 15-24 years), provides opportunities
for young people to learn from one another, share experiences and ideas on
community-based environmental actions and develop joint strategies on promoting
environmental protection.
The TUNZA conference 2007 follows in the footsteps of the 2005 TUNZA conference
in Bangalore, India.
Nomination Criteria
For
candidates to be considered their birth dates must fall strictly between
26 August 1984 and 26 August 1992.
Candidates
must be nominated by their organizations and must be active members.
Only
nominations from organizations working on or interested in environmental
and sustainable development issues will be considered.
Each
nomination must have two candidates - one female and one male. But only
one of them will be elected (Please
note that applications will not be considered unless the above is
fulfilled).
All
nominations must reach UNEP on or before 28 February 2007.
The Children and Youth Unit, Division of Communications
and Public Information, United Nations Environment Programme, P.O Box 30552,
Nairobi, Kenya.
Tel: 254 -20-7623937 Fax: 254 -20-7623927/4350
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit,
non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual
cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth
groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in
India.
ICYO
functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family
consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work
and services through Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster)
Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International,
Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia.
Government to operate series of orphanages in effort to halt abortion of female fetuses
Feb 19, 2007 04:30 AM
NEW DELHI–The Indian government plans to set up a series of orphanages to raise unwanted baby girls in a bid to halt the widespread practice of aborting female fetuses, according to a senior government official.
Dubbed the "cradle scheme," the plan is an attempt to slow the practice that international groups say has killed more than 10 million female fetuses in the last two decades, said Renuka Chowdhury, India's minister of state for women and child development.
The practice has led to an alarming imbalance in the ratio between males and females in India, Chowdhury told the Press Trust of India news agency in an interview published yesterday.
"What we are saying to the people is, have your children, don't kill them. And if you don't want a girl child, leave her to us," she said.
Chowdhury said the Indian government planned to set up special orphanages in each regional district to accept the unwanted infants.
"We will bring up the children. But don't kill them because there really is a crisis situation," she said.
Yesterday, police arrested a gynecologist and a janitor at a Christian missionary hospital near the central Indian city of Bhopal after the discovery of nearly 400 bones from fetuses and newborns in a pit behind the hospital.
It is believed they are the remains of unwanted baby girls.
"The question of female feticide and infanticide is part of our investigation, as is illegal abortions," said Police Supt. Satish Saxena.
Many districts in the country of more than 1 billion people routinely report only 800 girls born for every 1,000 boys. According to the latest census figures in India, the number of girls per 1,000 boys declined from 945 to 927 between 1991 and 2001.
Discrimination against girls arises from the low value attached to females in Indian society. Boys are seen as future breadwinners, while girls are seen as a burden on the family, requiring a large dowry that many poor families cannot afford.
Females are generally the last to be educated or to get medical treatment.
Tests to determine the gender of a fetus are outlawed in India, and the government says it is clamping down on doctors who break the law.
But social activists say there are many loopholes that allow those who provide tests to remain free.
Since the law was enacted in 1994, only one doctor has been convicted.
Chowdhury did not say how much the orphanage plan would cost but said money had been allocated in the next budget for it. It was not clear when the first orphanages would open.
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, reuters)
--===--==-=-=-=-
India to Open Orphanages to Takein Unwanted Girl Children
Orphanages may deter parents from feticide
The Indian government has announced a nationwide series of orphanages for girls. Alarmed by the inability to stem the widespread practice of female feticide. The news came on the day that police arrested two people near the city of Bhopal, in central India, after officers recovered almost 400 pieces of bones believed to be of newly born female babies or fetuses.
The orphanage scheme is a response to the deepening crisis over the country's "missing girls." Renuka Chowdhury, the Minister of State for Women and Child Development, estimates the number of either female fetuses aborted or newborn girls killed to be 10 million over the past two decades.
"What we are saying to the people is have your children, don't kill them. And if you don't want a girl, leave her to us," Ms Chowdhury told wire agencies, adding that the plan envisaged each regional centre would get an orphanage.
A Unicef report last December said 7,000 fewer girls are born in India every day than the global average would suggest. The findings revealed a grisly underside to the economic boom in India. The imbalance in gender ratio has become sharpest in India's richest districts, where couples can afford the ultrasound examination.
Although sex determination tests of unborn babies are illegal, states display neither the political will nor the resources to enforce the law.
"While the [orphanages] are a good short-term measure, the longer-term, bigger problem is lack of law enforcement. The doctors and hospitals that kill girls have to be prosecuted and closed down," said Swami Agnivesh, head priest of the Arya Samaj, a religious body which campaigns against female foeticide.
Some states have resorted to financial incentives to correct the skewed sex ratios. On offer in various regions are free immunizationS, no school fees and free books, no marriage expenses and in one state after daughters have left, there is an age allowance to take care of parents.
(The Guardian 19/Feb/07)
-=-=-=-
The Indian Network for Combat Trafficking (INCT) is the wider platform where all civil society organizations can come together and discuss problems, voice their opinions and work coherently as a team to combat trafficking (prevention, rescue, repatriation, rehabilitation), to end the sexual exploitation and abuse of children and women.
International Workshop on Youth Values Development
The International
Youth Centre (IYC), Kuala Lumpur will be organized the ‘International Workshop
On Youth Values Development’ from March 18-25, 2007 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
The workshop will be organized in cooperation with the University Putra
Malaysia (UPM), Ministry of Youth and Sports Malaysia, Asian Youth Council
(AYC), Committee for ASEAN Youth Cooperation (CAYC) and the Malaysian Youth
Council (MYC).
The theme of the
workshop is “Operationalising Youth
Values for Maximizing Human Capital” and comprise
of: Paper presentations, country paper presentations, Forum, group discussions,
deliberations and field visits.
The workshop shall be determining approaches and methods to
develop and instill positive values among young people., while the following
objectives are set
a.To
share development approaches on developing human values
b.To
identify best practices on youth values development
c.To
identify relevant development programmes on inculcating values in youth
d.To
prepare youth leaders for their roles in the development and implementation of
sustainable youth development programmes
For more detail and
participation contact Mr. Salehudin Ghazali, Programme Executive, IYC at email:
admin@...
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit,
non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual
cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth
groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in
India.
ICYO functions
as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work
and services through Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia
(E-Newsletter from network of youth organizations in India)
------------------------------------
70% Rural Women in Bihar not Aware of HIV/AIDS: Survey
The word HIV/AIDS may be dreaded the world over, but in Bihar's rural hinterland nearly 35 per cent married men and 70 per cent women have no idea about it. In urban areas, there are nine per cent men, who have never heard of it.
These are the findings of the latest National Family Health Survey (NHFS), which shows with devastating clarity the extent to which Bihar has failed to create a properly functional public health system. The fieldwork for the survey of 2005-2006 was conducted between April and July 2006.
The NHFS is a massive all-India survey which gives key indicators on vaccination rates,
HIV/AIDS rates, child nutrition, infant mortality etc. The last one was conducted in 1999.
In the last six years, the number of children, who are wasted (too thin for height) in Bihar, has gone up to 28 per cent in 2005-06 from 20 per cent recorded in 1999 while the number of underweight children (too thin for age) has reached 58 per cent from 54 per cent in 1999.
Though the trends in infant mortality in rural areas is encouraging as the rate has gone down from 68 per cent to 63 per cent, it has surprisingly risen to 54 per cent from 53 per cent in urban areas during the last survey.
The total fertility rate is 4 children per woman, mocking at the much-publicized two-child norm. Nearly 60.3 per cent of the surveyed women were married at 18 and 25 per cent women in the age group of 15-19 had become mothers, or were pregnant. Craving for sons refuses to die down as 77.4 per cent married women with two living children wanted sons.
Only 34.1 per cent women aged between 15 and 49 years use family planning. Just 28.8 per cent of these women used modern methods, compared to male counterparts, of whom just 23.8 percent have tried it.
Overall 82.4 per cent children aged 12 to 23 months were immunised while only 22.2 per cent children with diarrhoea were given ORS. Just 48.7 per cent of the children were taken to a health facility while just 54.6 per cent of kids with complaints of acute respiratory infections had access to any health facility.
Despite spread of awareness at every level only 4 per cent received breast-feeding within an hour of birth. No wonder 58.4 per cent of children below three years were found underweight;42.3 per cent of them are stunted and 27.7 percent are wasted, according to the survey.
The survey found that 43 per cent of women had less than normal body mass index. The percentage for men being significantly lower at 28.7. The percentage of anaemic children between 6 and 35 months is 87.6, while 68.3 per cent married women were anaemic, the report added.
As much as 46.3 per cent newly married women participate in household decisions, while 59 per cent ever-married women experienced spouse violence, the survey said. (Ashok Mishra/Hindustan Times/13.2.2007)
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Youth Information is published by
Indian Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO)
194-A, Arjun Nagar, Safdarjang Enclave, New Delhi 110029, India
Indian Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit, non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in India.
ICYO functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family consists of over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work and services through Youth Organizations; To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society; To promote effective youth programmmes; To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the development of youth work; To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings; To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations; Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development; Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC); Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand; ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's YDP Network; Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD); International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO); Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD); World Youth Foundation, Malaysia
Northeast India Tribal Group Offers Cash
Reward to Women With More Than 12 Babies
Tribal leaders in India's remote
northeast are offering cash rewards to women who bear more than a dozen
children in a bid to keep from being outnumbered by settlers from elsewhere, a
leader said.
In the past two months, Khasi tribal
chieftains in Meghalaya state have paid 16,000 rupees (US$348; euro270) each to
four such women including 45-year-old Amilia Sohtun, who has 17 children, said
H.S. Shylla, a member of the Khasi Hills Autonomous District Council.
Tribal elders defended the move,
which has infuriated many women and health activists "Our community faces
a genuine threat of being outnumbered by outsiders, and the only way we can
prevent our race from becoming extinct is to ensure our population rises soon
enough," Shylla told.
The council is an elected
administrative body of tribal leaders in Meghalaya. It works with the state
government on development issues, and makes decisions regarding customary
community rules. The Khasis, numbering less than a million, are the majority
community in Christian-dominated Meghalaya, which has 2.5 million people.
The community is worried about an
unabated influx of migrants from outside the state, Shylla said. However, some
in the state decried the incentive programme. "We oppose the idea because
no one has the right to keep having babies unless she can provide them with a
quality life," said Theilin Phanbuh, an activist in Shillong. "It is
for the authorities to check the influx or settlement of outsiders in
traditional land belonging to our people. Increasing our community's population
by having more children is not the answer," she said. Meghalaya health
activist Hasina Kharbhih also slammed the idea.
"A woman's body is not a
machine that she can go on having babies. The government must intervene on the
Khasi Council's decision because of the health issues involved," she said.
Shylla said the decision to pay
mothers of more than 12 "has been generally welcomed."
The Council has received four more
requests for cash incentives from women with more than a dozen children, Shylla
said. In Meghalaya's matrilineal society, a man moves into his bride's home and
their children take the mother's maiden name.
Meghalaya is one of the seven states
in India's remote northeast where fears of migration from other parts of India
and neighboring Bangladesh have helped fuel separatist revolts. (The PUSH
Journal)
India's Health Indicators Show Some
Improvement But Still Lag Far behind Wealthier Nations
Nearly half of India's children are
malnourished, putting the country in the same league as some of the world's
poorest countries even though fewer infants are dying and more pregnant Indian
women are seeing doctors, according to government data released on 9th
February.
The figures from India's National
Family Health Survey offered a snapshot of a country that has made gains in
recent years, yet is struggling to match its dramatic economic achievements
with equal improvements in the health of its more than 1 billion people.
The data also highlighted persistent
gaps between the health of rural and urban India, and the awareness of health
issues among men and women, who in many parts of India remain second-class
citizens, at best. But the most glaring problem illustrated by the data was the
health of India's children. With about 46 percent of children underweight a
negligible improvement over the last survey, conducted in 1998-99 India is in
the same league as nations like Burkina Faso and Cambodia. In China, Asia's
other rising economic power and the country India so often compares itself
with, only 8 percent of children are underweight.
The improved infant mortality rate
down to 57 per 1,000 births from 68 in 1998-99 remains dramatically higher than
that seen in Western nations, such the Netherlands, where it is 4.In every category where a comparison
between the health of people in the countryside and cities was offered, those
in rural areas lagged far behind. The rural infant mortality rate, for example,
was 62 per 1,000, compared to 42 the in urban areas.
Such statistics
show India "should be worried," said Werner Schultink of UNICEF.
"It's going to be difficult for India if wants to use its human resources
to develop the nation but does not make improvements."
The survey the third conducted since
1992-1993 covers about 200,000 people between the ages of 15 and 54, more than
half of them women, and was conducted through face-to-face interviews all
across India between December 2005 and August 2006. It has no significant
margin-of-error.
Only selected figures were released
and the full report was expected soon.
According to nearly 51 percent of
women made at least three visits to the doctor when they were pregnant, up from
44 percent in 1998-99. Some 41 percent has children in a hospital or clinic, up
from about 34 percent in the last survey.
Some 57 percent of Indian women who
are or have been married have heard about HIV a big jump from the 40 percent
reported in 1998-99 but still likely to be criticized as far too low for a
country's with 5.7 million people infected with the disease, the most in the
world.
The data also indicated that a much
higher percentage of men in the same group 80 percent had heard about the
disease. No comparison with the data from previous surveys was offered for men.
The difference may have something to
do with the fact that men are much more likely to be exposed to the country's
media the survey found 80 percent of men had access to media, while only 65
percent of women did. (The PUSH Journal)
Workshop on HIV/AIDS Accountability and Transparency
Asia-Pacific Parliamentarians Promise to Get
Involved in HIV Prevention
In
spite of the availability of funds, HIV and AIDS continue to spread. Several
observers pointed some factors, including the lack of accountability and
transparency in the programme; where parliamentarians can play effective roles.
With this view, the AFPPD had organized an "Asian Parliamentarians' workshop
on HIV and AIDS with Focus on Accountability and Transparency" from
January 24-25, 2007 in Bangkok.
Parliamentarians from region
discussed the causes and possible ways to prevent more infection, and the
status of accountability and transparency. The expert from UNFPA, UNAIDS and
FHI assisted them. At the end of the workshop, each parliamentarian made
personal commitments before going back to their respective countries.
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit,
non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual cooperation
and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth groups, clubs
and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in India.
ICYO
functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family
consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work
and services through Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia
We’re getting down to the wire on the Water Booklet project and things are getting pretty exciting round here! The deadline for submissions passed yesterday and, since my previous update, the number of submissions has almost doubled! We've now received almost 500 submissions from over 200 different contributors: great work everyone! Thank you very much!!
The Editorial Meeting begins on Monday, and we're all set to jump right in. The next couple weeks WILL be very busy, but this last week was also incredibly productive for the design of the book.
For several days last week our in-house designer extraordinaire, Daniel, met with Fabien and Gonzalo, two professional designers who work with UNDP, to create a grid and template on which to base the layout for the book. Their goal was to take the existing framework and visual style of the official UNDP Human Development Report, and fit it into our project -- taking into account such things as: showcasing artwork and allowing more room for illustrations and poetry, considering younger readers etc.
Attached to this e-mail you will find a mock-up of the cover of the book. Bear in mind that it is NOT final. The title, for example, WILL change and the text/artwork may be different as well. That said, headings, margins, fonts, color pallet, and style are likely to look at lot like what we have here. So, enjoy! And please feel free to let us know if you have any suggestions. Feedback is what we want and expect from you!
Also in terms of feedback, we're still on the hunt for the perfect title for the book (the one provided in the attached template was a joke: our highly creative German Webmaster combined "Water" "Booklet" into a single word: "Watlet")
Just to give you all an idea -- and to get your brain cells churning -- remember that the title of the UNDP's HDR report was "Beyond Scarcity". So, similarly, our title needs to be catchy, clever, short, and most importantly translatable.
As you brainstorm, remember: the title does not have to have the word "water" in it, because our subtitle will include it. It will likely read something like this: "Young People's summary of the UN Human Development Report 2006 - Beyond Scarcity: Power and the global water crisis"
So, please feed us any more ideas you might have as they come to you.
Also, we need to get more LAUNCH ideas – and fun plans! - for World Water Day (March 22). We need everybody to promote and celebrate World Water Day in their communities, and we need your help coming up with creative and fun ways to get people involved. A group in Austria, for example, suggested that they could potentially throw a huge water balloon fight in their town square. What ideas can you come up with? Let us know!
Thanks again so much for everyone's help. This project is truly a great one -- and you all are the beating heart of it.
Let's keep it up!
Remember email any and all questions to Ben at water@...
Indian Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit, non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in India.
ICYO functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family consists of over 365 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different corners of India.
·Feature Story Exclusive school for HIV/AIDS children in India
·Spotlight Mozambique: HIV/Aids Carers to Be Taught ARV Management
·Unsung Heroine Namibia: At home with a home-based caregiver ACW Alert HIV/AIDS may orphan 25 mill children by 2010 Positively Alive Grandfather of six thanks ARVs for saving his life ACW Perspective Malawi: Home based care eases pressure on public health sector
·Quote of the month Rich Stearns
From the Campaign Trail
Home-based care reduces HIV prevalence rate By, Victoria Muringayi, Zimbabwe Independent (Harare), November 10, 2006
The National Aids Council (NAC) has attributed the decline in the Aids prevalence rate to various projects such as the home-based care system which deals with people living with the HIV/Aids virus. NAC board chairman, Reverend Murombedzi Kuchera, said the awareness campaigns being carried out by various stakeholders nationwide were helping reduce the prevalence rate. more...
Feature Story
Exclusive school for HIV/AIDS children in India By, MediaCorp press, September 21, 2006
AIDS-infected children play in an orphanage for HIV-positive children run by an Indian NGO in Madras, November 2004. A non-profit organization has set up a school in India for children infected with HIV/AIDS and barred from other institutions, an official said. more...
Mozambique: HIV/Aids carers to be taught ARV management By, UN Integrated Regional Information Networks, January 16, 2007
The Mozambican Red Cross will begin training hundreds of volunteer workers to manage antiretroviral therapy (ART) for the HIV/AIDS sufferers in their care. "This training is extremely important and will improve the work of our carers," Paula Macava, the Red Cross Mozambique coordinator of the HIV/AIDS programme, told IRIN. "We have now finalised an eight-module training package on antiretroviral therapy management, specifically designed for carers." more...
Namibia: At home with a home-based caregiver By, Tanja Bause, The Namibian, September 22, 2006
Out of love for her community and the urge to help where she can, Adriana Garises (30) did a home-based care course with Catholic AIDS Action and the Namibian Red Cross in 2003. "I saw the huge need to care for affected and infected people at home level, as the hospitals cannot accommodate the masses of people anymore," she says. more...
ACW Alert
HIV/AIDS may orphan 25 mill children by 2010 By, Mu Xuequan, China View, 2006
Lagos - No fewer than 25 million children worldwide may be orphaned by the HIV/AIDS scourge by 2010, the official News Agency of Nigeria reported on Wednesday. Dr. Austin Omoigberale, an official of the World Health Organization (WHO), was quoted as saying that "HIV/AIDS infection in children rose significantly in the last decade worldwide." more...
Positively Alive
Grandfather of six thanks ARVs for saving his life By, Jan de Groot, Sundaytimes, October 2006
The year is 1993. The occasion is my donating of blood to the Natal Blood Transfusion service. The result is that I am not allowed to give blood and that I must see the office. The outcome is that I am infected with the HIV virus. I am a white male, at the time 67 years old, a grandfather with six grandchildren, and I know very little, if anything, about HIV. more...
ACW Perspective
Malawi: Home based care eases pressure on public health sector By, IRIN Africa PlusNews, August 5, 2006
Mzuzu - Faced with the devastating impact of an HIV/AIDS epidemic compounded by abject poverty, Malawians have eased the pressure on state hospitals by caring for chronically ill family and neighbors at home. A home based care (HBC) project in Northern Malawi has assembled 225 young volunteers in the region's nine districts to provide community based support to homes and guardians looking after people living with AIDS (PWAs). The aim is to ease their suffering and prolong their lives. more...
Quote of the Month
"I believe that this could very well be looked back on as the sin of our generation. I look at my parents and ask, where were they during the civil rights movement? I look at my grandparents and ask, what were they doing when the holocaust in Europe was occurring with regard to the Jews, and why didn't they speak up? And when we think of our great, great, great-grandparents, we think how could they have sat by and allowed slavery to exist? And I believe that our children and their children, 40 or 50 years from now, are going to ask me, what did you do while 40 million children became orphans in Africa?" (Rich Stearns, President of World Vision, US)
Indian Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit, non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in India.
ICYO functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family consists of over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work and services through Youth Organizations; To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society; To promote effective youth programmmes; To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the development of youth work; To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings; To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations; Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development; Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC); Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand; ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's YDP Network; Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD); International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO); Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD); World Youth Foundation, Malaysia.
Exhorting the youth to enter
politics as a full-time vocation, President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam urged them to
make a meaningful contribution to the development of the nation.
"The youth should take up
politics as their career in large numbers. Political science should form part
of the curriculum from the secondary to college level for all students with development
politics as the focus," Kalam said in his address to the nation on the eve
of Republic Day.
Referring to India's fast growing
population, he said there were over 540 million youth under the age of 25 that
would be continuously growing till 2050.
"Citizens should proactively
cast their votes to select candidates of known performance with honesty as the
focus. Legal personalities, experts and professionals should educate citizens
about the political process, constitution, procedures and their rights and
responsibilities."
Outlining some of the other tasks
before the country's youth, Kalam said through politics they would need to make
education accessible to every citizen, uplift citizens below the poverty level
and accelerate agriculture reforms.
National
Movement of Youth Vital: Manmohan Singh, Prime Minister of India
Highlighting the importance of young
Indians in the path to progress, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said the country
needed a national movement of youth to ensure social development and equality.
Addressing the annual Prime
Minister's National Cadet Corps rally in New Delhi, he also stressed on the
need to move ahead with "greater speed" to sustain the progress and
to ensure social justice to all as the country rolls on the path to
development.
"India needs a national
movement of young people engaged actively in social development, sports and the
development of personal character. Values like discipline, comradeship,
loyalty, dedication to the nation and the cause of social equality are built
through such movements," he said.
"After six decades of our
independence, our Republic today marches forward with confidence. We have to
move ahead with greater speed to sustain our progress and ensure social justice
and equality to our people," Singh added.
Kalam's Agenda for Youth: Work for World
Peace
President of
India address the 12th National Youth Festival
Ignited minds of the youth of India
are the most powerful resource on the Earth, above the Earth and under the
Earth.
President of India, A P J Abdul
Kalam set the tone for his two-day visit to the Pune city with his words of
inspiration as he called upon the youth of the country to work towards
achieving world peace.
"In the 21st century, one
should know one's purpose in life. Human society has been at war from within,
and while there have been two World Wars in the last century, terrorism and low
intensity warfare are affecting us to a great extent. At this time, when 3 of 6
billion people of the world are youth, this youth force should work towards
peace," Kalam said at the valedictory function of the 12th National Youth
Festival in Pune.
He stressed that the greatest
challenge of the country was eradicating poverty where 54 per cent of the
population were below poverty line (BPL). "To meet this challenge, the
five engines of growth — infrastructure, education, water, energy, and
employment generation — need to be accelerated for economic
sustainability."
Kalam described his Vision 2020,
which included energy, security, and transparency of administration through
e-governance and 100 per cent literacy. "Every Indian should have a
university degree or any employable qualification," he said.
"Venture
capital system and entrepreneurship training should aim at creating more enterprise
so that employment can be generated and there are more givers than
seekers," Kalam said. The President also read out his seven-point oath to
be repeated by the students, which urged them to "participate in making
Vision 2020 a reality". The students took oath to set goals and achieve
them, succeed in their tasks and enjoy others' success, keep their surroundings
clean, contribute to peace in the world, lead an honest life free of
corruption, light the lamp of knowledge, and do the best they can to contribute
to the vision of India.
ASEAN Tourism Ministers Underline the
Importance of Youth
Youth is the key in tourism. Such
viewpoint gained prominence during the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) Tourism Forum 2007 held in Singapore. The tourism ministers from the
ASEAN region are counting on youth from across the world as part of their
regional tourism drive.
Sharing his viewpoint during the
"Shaping the Future of Youth Tourism Forum" in Singapore, Robin Yap,
Director of Contiki Indonesia Resorts said Singapore is probably the leader of
this development and explained why other Asian countries may lag behind when it
comes to traveling youths.
Upcoming Events:
Regional
Network Resource Exchange (RNRE) Workshop for South Asia
ECPAT
International will organize the Regional Network Resource Exchange (RNRE)
Workshop for South Asia from February 8-10, 2007 in Kathmandu, Nepal. The RNRE
includes workshops on ‘Protecting Children from Sexual Exploitation in
Emergencies’ and ‘Working with Boys who are Commercially Sexually Exploited’
All
the ECPAT affiliates and member organizations are expected to participate
including ICYO.
RHIYA out come Good
Practices Dissemination meeting
The UNFPA and European Commission jointly organizing
the meeting to dissemination of the Reproductive Health Initiative for Youth in
Asia (RHIYA) good practices. The meeting will be held in Bangkok, Thailand from
February 7-8, 2007.
ICYO will attend the meeting and represented by Mr
Vijay Bharatiya.
Water and Youth
The Food and Agricultural
Organization and the Pan American Health Organization will join over 300
national and international organizations to convene the first international
meeting on "Water and Youth" in Buenos Aires, Argentina from April
12-14, 2007.
The objective of the Meeting is to
increase commitment and to initiate action that will contribute to water
sustainability, as well as to forge a network of international cooperation. For
more information log on http://www.waterandyouth.org
Global Youth Service Day
Global Youth Service Day (GYSD) is
celebrated on a designated weekend every April in more than 115 countries. GYSD
also remembers the year-round contributions of young people as assets and
resources in their communities. In April 2007 from April 20-22, 2007 millions
of young people, in partnership with non-Governmental organizations,
faith-based institutions, Governments, schools, media, and businesses will
address the most pressing needs in their communities and their countries. For
more information log on http://www.GYSD.org
TUNZA International Youth
Conference
The TUNZA International Youth
Conference is one of the main platforms for cooperation and interaction between
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and its youth partners. It is the
vision of the organization to "foster a generation of environmentally
conscious citizens who will better influence decision-making processes and act
responsibly to create a sustainable world". Organized for young people
(15-24 years), the Conferences provides opportunities for young people to learn
from one another, share experiences and ideas on community-based environmental
actions and develop joint strategies on promoting environmental protection.
The programme will be held in
Leverkusen, Germany from 26 - 30th of August 2007.
Asia-Europe Young Parliamentarians Meeting
The Sixth Asia-Europe Young
Parliamentarians Meeting (AEYPM) will be held in the Netherlands, in
collaboration with the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the International
Institute for Asian Studies, and hosted by the Dutch House of Representatives.
The series of Asia-Europe Young Parliamentarians Meetings is a programme of the
People-to-People Exchange Department of the Asia-Europe Foundation, which aims
to foster a high-level exchange of ideas and intensive networking between young
parliamentarians from Asia and Europe.
This year theme is "Towards an
Asia-Europe Parliamentarian Partnership" and will be held from February 26
– March 2, 2007.
Experts
to Promote Greater Socio-economic Participation of Persons with Disabilities
An 'Expert Group Meeting on the
Promotion of Social and Economic Participation of Persons with Disabilities
towards the Biwako Plus Five' is scheduled for 27-28 February at the UN
Conference Centre in Bangkok. At the meeting, experts will review the
achievements made in implementing the Biwako Millennium Framework, assess
global and regional developments that have taken place over the past five
years, and identify key issues. The meeting is taking place in preparation of a
mid-point review of the Asian and Pacific Decade of Disabled Persons, 2003-2012
to be held in September, at which time Biwako Plus Five will be adopted
Asian Parliamentarians Meeting on Population and Development
The Asian Population and Development
Association (APDA) with support from UNFPA and IPPF will organize " 23rd
Asian Parliamentarians Meeting on Population and Development" on February
22nd and 23rd in Tokyo, Japan
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit,
non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual
cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth
groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in
India.
ICYO
functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family
consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal: To improve and extend the youth work
and services through Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative
(Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign; Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia