dc.identifier.citation |
Kanungo, Chitra 2015. United Nations and Rights of Child, Focus: Syrian Refugee Children, p. 323, In: Proceedings of the International Postgraduate Research Conference 2015 University of Kelaniya, Kelaniya, Sri Lanka, (Abstract), 339 pp. |
en_US |
dc.description.abstract |
―Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high‖ words of the Indian poet Tagore
reflect the very essence of Human Dignity. Founded on the doctrine of rights based on natural
laws, Human Rights are universally accepted as those minimal rights that individuals need to
lead a life of their choice – their protection and promotion is the first responsibility of the
government. The aim of a universal system of Rights is to revise and restore human values in
all societies, where political, racial, social and economic oppression exists and to wipe out
human misery, to enrich and refine human life in all parts of the world, with special attention
to the child – the future of Life itself. After the horrors of suffering in the last two world
wars, the United Nations grandiosely adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on
10th December 1948. Art 1 of the U.N. charter states that all human beings are born free and
equal in dignity and rights and that being ―endowed with reason and conscience‖, they should
behave in a spirit of brotherhood. From time to time, the U.N. has made several declarations
for effective enforcement of rights. Of particular interest to us is the Convention of the
Rights of the Child (1989). The Convention, the focus of this study, is based on the pledge ---
- ―Mankind owes to the child the best it can give‖. The U.N. declaration of the Rights of the
Child is its most comprehensive document. Yet, the child continues to be neglected. 67.4
million Children are out of school, their access to health care is negligible and they face
alarming security risks in a strife – torn world, despite Art-20 &22 which provides for Rights
of vulnerable children like Refugees to special protection. Issues of Rights of children,
therefore, are not a matter of legality alone but attitude and an assertion of social justice. The
main focus of this paper will be to analyse the provisions of the Rights of Child in the U.N.
Charter and to highlight the fact that the child continues to be deprived of his basic rights.
The present study is based on the Library method of Social Science Research. The data has
been collected from U.N. documents, reports, websites, books, journals and newspapers. |
en_US |