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The more than 60 heads
of state and government, together with some 1,700 activists who also
converged on New York for the United Nations Special Session on
Children, were as much relieved as disenchanted when they eventually
managed to arrive at an agreement.
It came
after 30 hours of bitter, non-stop negotiations over contentious
issues. There was much haggling over the content of an outcome
document for the session, and major concessions were made by the
various delegations.
Somewhat
amazingly given the issue -- improving the lives of children -- the
negotiations proved to be a nightmare. The difficulties have cast a
long shadow over what was expected to be a celebratory occasion.
Still the
conference, held from 8 to 10 May at UN headquarters in New York, was
perhaps the most optimistic global event in the many months since the
horror of 11 September. Close to 6,000 people attended what was
effectively the most important international conference on children in
more than a decade.
Representatives of 180 high-level national delegations and 800 NGOs
from 119 countries were in attendance, along with 250 members of
parliament from 79 countries and scores of journalists and activists.
Participants also included business magnates, cultural figures, Nobel
laureates and religious leaders.
But in
many ways, the most important participants in this unprecedented event
were the 350 children who came to the conference as official delegates
from 132 countries. The largest ever number of children to actively
participate in deliberations at a UN conference, they attended a
mini-Special Session from 5 to 7 May -- the "UN Children's
Forum" -- to discuss the issues that matter most to them. The
children presented their views on the outcome document to the UN
General Assembly as it opened on 8 May.
This was a
historic event, the first time young people have addressed the General
Assembly on a substantive issue.
Addressing
the opening ceremony of the children's forum, UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan said: "Your presence here marks a new chapter in the
history of the UN. So far, adults have called the shots, but now it's
time to build the world with children. Your voices will be heard, I
promise."
Mrs
Suzanne Mubarak, who highlighted the plight of the Palestinian child
in her address to the General Assembly on 8 May, headed the Egyptian
delegation to the UN special session.
"The
negative traumatic repercussions of the tragedy that has unfolded in
the occupied Palestinian territories over the past weeks will not be
confined to the children of Palestine alone; they will extend to
include the children of the region and of the world without any
distinction," she said.
"What
took place sows the seeds of fear and hatred in the hearts of innocent
children on both sides.
It
deprives them of the spirit of tolerance. It creates an atmosphere of
hopelessness and uncertainty and opens the door of violence and
extremism.
All this
while the world's conscience is, for the most part, a mere bystander.
And we all ask ourselves, have we lost our conscience? Or are there
other standards being applied in today's world?"
From the
assembly podium, Mrs Mubarak called upon the world to contribute to
putting an end to the human rights violations in the Palestinian
occupied territories and to strive for peaceful and just solutions to
provide a safe life for children, regardless of their affiliations or
nationalities.
"Children are, in the final analysis, one and the same. They are
innocent beings who view life with hope and must not bear the burden
of the past, because they belong to the future."
Egypt has
recently hosted two regional preparatory meetings -- one African and
the other Arab -- for the special session.
At the
37th session of assembly of heads of state and government of the
Organisation of African Unity held in Lusaka, Zambia, Mrs Mubarak
received a mandate to present the declaration on the African Common
Position at the special session, and to ensure that it receives the
attention it deserves.
"The
African continent represents the world's greatest developmental
challenge -- for despite the attainment of a significant number of
achievements, the African child remains the most deprived.
Today, I
am conveying the voice of African children to the international
community, calling upon it to renew its commitment to ensure a future
that does not marginalise their existence," Mrs Mubarak said.
The
session's review of the achievements in the implementation of the
Declaration and Plan of Action adopted at the 1990 World Summit for
Children showed that children in the rest of the world are not faring
so well either.
Some 10
million children died of preventable diseases in the 1990s, 150
million children worldwide are malnourished, 120 million are not in
school and 300,000 children in various parts of the world are fighting
in wars.
Aid from
rich nations to the poor lagged at a time of unprecedented global
prosperity and in much of the developing world, the number of people
who live on less than $1 a day has surged over the last decade.
On the
other hand, a progress report issued by the office of the
secretary-general, entitled "We, the children" offers
evidence of considerable progress for the world's two billion
children.
More
children are in school than ever before, polio has been all but
eradicated and the number of children who die of diarrhea has been
reduced by half. Infant mortality rates, too, have improved in much of
the world.
The report
did, however, mention that, squeezed by foreign debt, many governments
have spent less and less on basic social services. At the same time,
rich countries fell far short of the commitments they made at the 1990
summit meeting to devote an average of 0.7 per cent of their GDP to
development assistance.
Having
been offered a chilling picture of the plight of children, acrimonious
delegates reluctantly put their heads together to arrive at an
agreement on the final document of the session, which will delineate
specific goals and measures to improve the lives of children over the
next 15 years.
The US,
the Vatican and some Islamic countries failed in their joint bid to
secure an explicit policy against making abortion available to
teenagers and to make abstinence for unmarried teenagers the
centrepiece of sex education.
Those
pressing for a family to be rigidly defined as a "married man and
woman" lost in their efforts as well.
The US
did, however, manage to play down the importance of the Convention on
the Rights of the Child, a landmark 1989 treaty that the US has not
ratified.
Somalia,
the only other remaining country in the world that had not ratified
the treaty, signed the convention earlier last week and is expected to
ratify it.
The US has
opposed the treaty partly because it condemns the use of capital
punishment against minors, a practice allowed by nearly half of
American states.
Conservatives in the US Congress have repeatedly objected to the
treaty, saying they fear it prioritises the rights of children over
those of parents -- allowing children to access certain health
services without their consent, for instance.
The final
declaration does not oblige any country to abolish capital punishment
for juveniles, nor does it endorse abortion as a family planning
method.
Several
countries and a host of children's advocacy groups had hoped the final
document would rely on the Convention on the Rights of the Child as
the legal standard for children's rights. As it turned out, the
language agreed upon did not do any such thing.
Still,
children's issues have no doubt climbed higher on the international
agenda in past years, and the special session's final document will be
useful for awareness-raising and will perhaps be used to improve laws.
The
participation of children at the conference has already shown
sceptical governments how much they stand to gain from a real
partnership with children.
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