Child Rights Protection
Founders Vision
TRINETRA RESEARCH INVESTIGATION FOUNDATION
(TRIF) is not a conventional NGO or a typical institution, it is the ray of
hope in millions of hearts, the first dream in their eyes, the first smile on
their faces. It is the sky and wings together for innumerable children,
excluded from human identity and dignity, with a desire to fly in freedom. It
is the tears of joy of a mother who finds her rescued child back in her lap
after years of helplessness and hopelessness. It is a battle to open the doors
of opportunities, a fire for freedom and education in the hearts and souls of
thousands of youth committed to wipe out the scourge of slavery and ignorance
from the face of mankind.
NCIB is the first lamp lit by those who
didn't believe in cursing the darkness, they dared to hold fire in their hands,
determined to dig out spring from stones. In an age of ignorance, neglect and
denial on the issue of child servitude, these ordinary youth had a vision to
see beyond heavens. Equipped with a strong will to demolish age-old myths and
misconceptions about child labor, they fought mighty criminals, slave masters
and mafia with exemplary courage.
Beginning its operation in 31st January
2014, a mass movement was ignited to create a child friendly society where all
children are free from exclusion and exploitation and receive free education of
good quality. The movement engaged itself in identifying, liberating,
rehabilitating and educating children in servitude through direct intervention,
community participation, partnerships and coalitions, promoting ethics in
trade, unionizing workers, running campaigns (on issues, such as education,
trafficking, forced labour, decent work, building child friendly villages) and
mobilizing the masses on a common action.
TRIF has triggered a ripple effect in India
and in international community. The tide is turning in favour of children, a
ray has multiplied itself into a sun which is constantly supplementing
brightness and warmth to the lives of unprivileged children. We need more
support...TRIF calls you to join hands in bringing a smile, the smile of
freedom, love and peace, on the face of every child in this world.
What are Child Rights?
Universally child rights are defined by
the United Nations and United Nations Convention on the Rights
of the Child (UNCRC). According to the UNCRC Child Rights are minimum
entitlements and freedoms that should be afforded to all persons below the age
of 18 regardless of race, colour, gender, language, religion, opinions,
origins, wealth, birth status or ability and therefore apply to all people
everywhere. The UN finds these rights interdependent and indivisible, meaning
that a right can’t be fulfilled at the expense of another right.
The purpose of the UNCRC is to
outline the basic human rights that should be afforded to children. There are
four broad classifications of these rights. These four categories cover all
civil, political, social, economic and cultural rights of every child.
A child's right to survival begins before a
child is born. According to Government of India, a child life begins after
twenty weeks of conception. Hence the right to survival is inclusive of the
child rights to be born, right to minimum standards of food, shelter and
clothing, and the right to live with dignity. Right to Protection: A child has
the right to be protected from neglect, exploitation and abuse at home, and
elsewhere.
Right to Participation
A child has a right to participate in any
decision making that involves him/her directly or indirectly. There are varying
degrees of participation as per the age and maturity of the child. Right to
Development: Children have the right to all forms of development: Emotional,
Mental and Physical. Emotional development is fulfilled by proper care and love
of a support system, mental development through education and learning and
physical development through recreation, play and nutrition.
What is Child Protection?
UNICEF considers child protection as
the prevention of or responding to the incidence of abuse, exploitation,
violence and neglect of children. This includes commercial sexual exploitation,
trafficking, child labour and harmful traditional practices, such as female
genital mutilation/cutting and child marriage. Protection also allows children
to have access to their other rights of survival, development, growth and
participation. UNICEF maintains that when child protection fails or is absent
children have a higher risk of death, poor physical and mental health, HIV/AIDS
infection, educational problems, displacement, homelessness, vagrancy and poor
parenting skills later in life. According to the Integrated Child
Protection Scheme (ICPS) Child Protection is about keeping children safe
from a risk or perceived risk to their lives or childhood. It is about
recognizing that children are vulnerable and hence reducing their vulnerability
by protecting them from harm and harmful situations. Child protection is about
ensuring that children have a security net to depend on, and if they happen to
fall through the holes in the system, the system has the responsibility to
provide the child with the necessary care and rehabilitation to bring them back
into the safety net.
CHILD PROTECTION
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Prevention |
Intervention |
Rehabilitation |
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Law and Policies |
Laws and Policies |
Laws and Policies |
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Processes and Protocols |
Access and Assistance |
Long term care until age 18 |
|
Mechanisms and Systems |
Immediate Relief (SOS attention) |
Skills and Training |
|
Monitoring |
Restoration of rights/Status Quo |
|
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Sensitization and Awareness |
Punish violators |
|
|
Building |
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Understanding the Difference
It is important to understand the
difference between these two concepts. Child rights are a set of principles or
ideals. They are entitlements and some of them are justifiable in a court of
law, but they are not tangible. Protection is one of these rights. But Child
Protection is more than a right. It is a framework or system by which the
rights of a child can come to be. The framework consists of various duty
bearers such as the departments of the government, police, school, civil
society, who all have roles to play to ensure that a child's rights are met,
and in the case that a child's rights are violated that the violator be brought
to justice and care be provided to the child. Child protection is not only
treatment, but should also be preventive. Risk management needs to take place
to reduce the risk of violation of child rights in any given circumstance or
space.
Child protection is hence the means through
which all other rights of a child can be upheld. For example a child has a
right to live a normal childhood in a family environment. The child protection
framework need to first take steps to ensure families are able to survive by
providing them when health, education, and food for free or at minimal cost.
The next step is to address the needs of children who have fallen through the
cracks such as destitute, abandoned, and orphan children. The framework
includes the mechanisms to relocate these children into caring families either
through adoption or foster care and provide these children with access to health
and education services. Hence the framework is not a single ministry or single
government body it is the interlinking functions of all ministries and sectors.
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