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RIGHTS: Sweet 16 Marriages Cause Controversy in Malawi
By Claire Ngozo
LILONGWE - Malawi's president, Bingu wa Mutharika, has come under severe pressure from civil society groups who are demanding he scrap a newly-passed bill allowing 16-year-olds to marry with the consent of their parents.
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RIGHTS-NAMIBIA: Updating Child Protection
By Servaas van den Bosch
WINDHOEK - A mammoth draft bill on child care and protection is nearing completion in Namibia. A gaggle of experts has made recommendations; a muster of officials will decide what goes in and what stays out. And all worry what the politicians will say.
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ARGENTINA: 20 Years for Manager in Tragic Club Blaze, but Band Acquitted
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - Nearly five years after a fire in a night club in the Argentine capital claimed the lives of 194 young people, a court sentenced the club manager and several city officials Wednesday. But the judges absolved the members of the band that was playing that night, touching off angry reactions from families of the victims waiting outside the courthouse.
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ANGOLA: Teenage School Programme Gives Drop Outs Second Chance at Education
By Louise Redvers

LUANDA - Free primary education for all is an Angolan government policy, but unfortunately this has not translated into a reality that sees all children receiving education.
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RIGHTS-PARAGUAY: NGO Offers Girls a Way Out of Sexual Exploitation
By Natalia Ruiz Díaz
ASUNCIÓN - Claudia was 13 years old when she came to the capital of Paraguay from her small rural town. Just a few weeks after her arrival she was wandering the streets of downtown Asunción, a victim of sexual exploitation.
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MIDEAST: Children Have a Way With Miracles
By Mohammed Omer
AMSTERDAM - Call it that choice between looking at the half-full or half-empty part of the results. And it is almost half; 55 percent of schoolchildren passed their exams in Gaza this year.
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RIGHTS: Disfiguring Disease Linked to Right to Food
By Gustavo Capdevila
GENEVA - Noma, an ulcerous disease whose name comes from a Greek word that means "to devour" because it literally eats away at malnourished children's faces in just a few months, is found in the developing world, mainly in Africa.
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MIDEAST: New Israeli Plan to Warn of Impending Attacks
By Eli Clifton
WASHINGTON - The Israeli Defence Force (IDF) is taking new measures to warn Palestinian civilians about impending aerial attacks. This comes in response to questions raised over whether Israel had complied with international laws during its 2006 war in Lebanon and the Gaza offensive earlier this year.
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CUBA: Compulsory Rural Boarding School on the Way Out
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Without fanfare or major explanations, the Cuban government has begun to dismantle the system of mandatory rural boarding school for students in the last three years of high school – one of various reforms aimed at improving the quality of education that will start to be implemented at the start of the next school year in September.
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CUBA: Fullest Possible Social Inclusion for the Disabled
By Patricia Grogg
SANTIAGO DE CUBA - Arnoldo Ramón Virgilio’s legs are of little use to him, but he has a way with words that more than makes up for any physical limitations. He’s one of the outpatients at the "América Labadí Arce" Medical and Education Centre, which provides health care and rehabilitation for the disabled in this city in eastern Cuba.
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MIDEAST: Traumatised Children Struggle to Rise Again
By Mel Frykberg
BREJ, Gaza - Tens of thousands of children in Gaza are still suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) following Israel's three-week bombing December- January.
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PARAGUAY: Dance Helps Disabled Kids Leap Barriers
By Natalia Ruiz Díaz
ASUNCIÓN - Nicolás, a 14-year-old disabled boy, was finally able to open up and begin expressing himself thanks to Open Wings, a project in Paraguay that uses modern dance as a tool to help youngsters with disabilities develop on both the physical and psychological level.
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MIDEAST: 'Lay Not Thine Hand Upon the Boy'
By Jerrold Kessel and Pierre Klochendler
TEL AVIV - "And He said, Lay not thine hand upon the boy, neither do thou any thing unto him: for now I know that thou fearest God" (Genesis 22:12). Not so much in fear of God as in fear of their own conscience, Israeli leaders have given temporary relief to hundreds of children of foreign workers who were facing deportation with their parents.
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News in RSS Around the globe, 30,500 children die each day from largely preventable diseases; 200 million remain malnourished; another 1.2 million are living with HIV; more than 11 million have been orphaned by AIDS; and 130 million school-age children -- over two-thirds of them girls -- are deprived of the right to education. According to U.N. estimates, there are also 250,000 to 300,000 child soldiers worldwide.

The U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child provides a universal framework for protecting and realising children's rights. People of faith have joined together as the Global Network of Religions for Children (GNRC) to do their part. In May 2008 an international Forum in Hiroshima focused on three themes: promoting ethics education to stop violence against children; putting children first in human development; and empowering children through ethics education to protect our planet.

Guns and Roses: IPS's Reporting On Global Armed Conflicts and Resolution Efforts
News in RSS
EDUCATION UNDER ATTACK - RECLAIMING SCHOOLS AS ZONES OF PEACE
by Helene-Marie Gosselin
Amongst the many casualties of conflict, education seldom makes the headlines, but students, teachers, administrators, and education officials are also on the front lines of battle, writes Helene-Marie Gosselin, director of the UNESCO Office to the United Nations.

HARNESSING RELIGIONS ADVANCES WELL-BEING OF CHILDREN
by Kul C. Gautam
Though all the world's major religions consider childhood sacred and needing special protection, they do not use their power and influence adequately to advance the well-being of children, writes Kul C. Gautam, former assistant secretary-general of the United Nations, and deputy executive director of UNICEF.

Global Network of Religions for Children
UNICEF
International Save the Children Alliance
Global Movement for Children
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Third Forum of the Global Network of Religions for Children

LEARNING TO SHARE

Values, Action, Hope
Hiroshima May 2008
IPS gratefully acknowledges the support provided by the
Arigatou Foundation in Japan