Remembering the African Child
The Day of the African Child has been celebrated on 16 June every year since 1991, when it was first initiated by the Organisation of African Unity. Besides honouring those that were part of the Soweto uprisings, the Day of the African Child also raises awareness of the continuing need for improvement of the education provided to African children.
In Soweto, South Africa, on 16 June, 1976, about 10 000 black school children marched in a column more than half a mile long, protesting the poor quality of their education and demanding the right to be taught in their own language. Hundreds of young students were shot, the most famous of which being Hector Pieterson. More than a hundred people were killed in protests in the following two weeks, and more than a 1 000 were injured.
On 16 June every year, governments, NGOs, international organisations and other stakeholders gather to discuss the challenges and opportunities facing the full realization of the rights of children Africa. For 2016, the theme is “Conflict and Crisis in Africa: Protecting all Children's Rights” which speaks to the ongoing infighting on the continent, with ten official conflicts going on the continent at the moment.
Here are 16 things you should know about this day and why children's rights in Africa are so vital.
1. The 16 June annual event honours the memories of students who were massacred in Soweto, South Africa, in 1976 for protesting against education injustice and inequality in the apartheid regime.
2. It was designated as Day of the African Child in 1991 by the African Union and every year events are organised to promote children's rights.
3. This year's theme is " Right to participate: let children be seen and heard" .
4. Some 30 million of the world's 57 million children out of school are in sub-Saharan Africa.
5. Last year the biggest event that year was a youth takeover of the Africa Union in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, by 500 young people from countries all over the continent.
6. On 16 June2014, there were 560 days left until the Millennium Development Goals deadline of the last day of 2015 - MDG2 was to ensure that all children in the world are in school and learning, which wasn’t achieved and has now been moved up further.
7. The Day of the African Child theme last year was " Eliminating harmful social and cultural practices affecting children: Our collective responsibility" .
8. One in six children born in sub-Saharan African do not live to their fifth birthday - even though child mortality fell by 45% between 1990 and 2012.
9. More than 100 events in more than 40 countries are being held around the world to mark Day of the African Child and Youth Action Month.
10. A campaign to end child marriage across Africa was launched in May 2014 by the African Union. One in three girls in low and middle-income countries are married by the age of 18.
11. One of the aims of the Day of the African Child is to highlight harmful practices such as genital mutilation. Thirty million girls in Africa are in danger of undergoing FGM in the next decade.
12. The poorest children in sub-Saharan Africa are four and a half times more likely to be out of school than the richest children.
13. By the year 2050 almost one in three of the world's children under 18 will be African.
14. The children of African women with at least five years of schooling have a 40% higher chance of survival.
15. Unicef and partners have secured the release of more than 1 000 children from armed groups in the Central African Republic in 2014, more than five times the total number of children released in 2013.
16. There are wide variations in school enrolment between African countries - ranging from 37% for boys and 34% for girls in Eritrea to 98% for both boys and girls in Tanzania.
Keith Vries
In Soweto, South Africa, on 16 June, 1976, about 10 000 black school children marched in a column more than half a mile long, protesting the poor quality of their education and demanding the right to be taught in their own language. Hundreds of young students were shot, the most famous of which being Hector Pieterson. More than a hundred people were killed in protests in the following two weeks, and more than a 1 000 were injured.
On 16 June every year, governments, NGOs, international organisations and other stakeholders gather to discuss the challenges and opportunities facing the full realization of the rights of children Africa. For 2016, the theme is “Conflict and Crisis in Africa: Protecting all Children's Rights” which speaks to the ongoing infighting on the continent, with ten official conflicts going on the continent at the moment.
Here are 16 things you should know about this day and why children's rights in Africa are so vital.
1. The 16 June annual event honours the memories of students who were massacred in Soweto, South Africa, in 1976 for protesting against education injustice and inequality in the apartheid regime.
2. It was designated as Day of the African Child in 1991 by the African Union and every year events are organised to promote children's rights.
3. This year's theme is " Right to participate: let children be seen and heard" .
4. Some 30 million of the world's 57 million children out of school are in sub-Saharan Africa.
5. Last year the biggest event that year was a youth takeover of the Africa Union in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, by 500 young people from countries all over the continent.
6. On 16 June2014, there were 560 days left until the Millennium Development Goals deadline of the last day of 2015 - MDG2 was to ensure that all children in the world are in school and learning, which wasn’t achieved and has now been moved up further.
7. The Day of the African Child theme last year was " Eliminating harmful social and cultural practices affecting children: Our collective responsibility" .
8. One in six children born in sub-Saharan African do not live to their fifth birthday - even though child mortality fell by 45% between 1990 and 2012.
9. More than 100 events in more than 40 countries are being held around the world to mark Day of the African Child and Youth Action Month.
10. A campaign to end child marriage across Africa was launched in May 2014 by the African Union. One in three girls in low and middle-income countries are married by the age of 18.
11. One of the aims of the Day of the African Child is to highlight harmful practices such as genital mutilation. Thirty million girls in Africa are in danger of undergoing FGM in the next decade.
12. The poorest children in sub-Saharan Africa are four and a half times more likely to be out of school than the richest children.
13. By the year 2050 almost one in three of the world's children under 18 will be African.
14. The children of African women with at least five years of schooling have a 40% higher chance of survival.
15. Unicef and partners have secured the release of more than 1 000 children from armed groups in the Central African Republic in 2014, more than five times the total number of children released in 2013.
16. There are wide variations in school enrolment between African countries - ranging from 37% for boys and 34% for girls in Eritrea to 98% for both boys and girls in Tanzania.
Keith Vries
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