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PARAGUAY: Indigenous Squatter Communities Organise Self-Help
By Natalia Ruiz Díaz
ASUNCIÓN - Indigenous families living in a squatter settlement on the outskirts of the Paraguayan capital are organising themselves, and now have a community soup kitchen and are producing and selling handicrafts. They don't want to return to panhandling on the streets of Asunción, so far from their home villages.
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ARGENTINA: Kidnappings, Threats Target Child Rights Campaign
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - Youngsters involved in a network of social organisations working with street kids and disadvantaged youths, as part of its "Hunger Is a Crime" campaign, have been the targets of eight kidnappings and dozens of death threats in the last 16 months.
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AFGHANISTAN: Child Rapist Police Return Behind U.S., UK Troops
By Gareth Porter*
WASHINGTON - The strategy of the major U.S. and British military offensive in Afghanistan's Helmand province aimed at wresting it from the Taliban is based on bringing back Afghan army and police to maintain permanent control of the population, so the foreign forces can move on to another insurgent stronghold.
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HEALTH: Namibia Makes Strides in Paediatric HIV
By Servaas van den Bosch
WINDHOEK - While paediatric HIV remains a growing concern throughout Southern Africa, Namibian doctors have managed to put high numbers of babies on the life-saving antiretroviral (ARV) treatment with the help of an early infant diagnosis (EID) programme based on dry blood sampling.
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BRAZIL: Agricultural School Cultivates Pride in Family Farming
By Mario Osava
INDEPENDENCIA, Brazil - "Here you get an education for the country and not for the city, which is not where I live, and that’s why I can relate to this school," says Israel Santos, 16, currently enrolled in the second year of secondary school studies at an agricultural school in the municipality of Independencia, in northeastern Brazil.
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RIGHTS-NAMIBIA: New Dangers, New Efforts to Protect Children
By Servaas van den Bosch
WINDHOEK - New channels like sms messages and social-networking application Facebook are just some of the tools government and civil rights groups will be using to encourage input on the Child Care and Protection Bill will soon be tabled in Namibia's parliament.
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EDUCATION: Mother Tongue Absent in Thousands of Classrooms
By Haider Rizvi
UNITED NATIONS - Millions of children across the world fail to receive a basic education not only because they are born into poverty, but because local authorities do not allow them to read and write in their native language at school.
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DEVELOPMENT: Social Enterprise in the Swazi Highveld
By Mantoe Phakathi
Bulembu, SWAZILAND - In 2006, faith-based charity organisation Bulembu Ministries Swaziland took over management of an all-but abandoned mining town, situated on a 1,700 hectares in northwestern Swaziland.
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SWAZILAND: Resurrecting Bulembu
By Mantoe Phakathi
Bulembu, SWAZILAND - In 2005, Bulembu was a ghost town. The once-prosperous mining town's population had fallen from 10,000 to just 100. The beautiful houses that used to accommodate company staff and their families, schools that had been among the best performers in the Kingdom, shops, clinics - all fell quickly into disrepair when the asbestos mine closed.
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CUBA: What Schools Can and Cannot Do for Equality
By Dalia Acosta
HAVANA - They are sisters, just two years apart, and had the same upbringing and education, but they have completely different aspirations. While Ana, the younger, dreams of going to university and following a professional career, Marlén is only interested in boyfriends, getting married and living happily and quietly at home.
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EUROPE: Bringing Up a 'Lost Generation'
By Pavol Stracansky
BRATISLAVA - A "lost generation" of children vulnerable to crime and exploitation is growing up in Eastern Europe as their parents migrate abroad for work and leave them behind, migration watchdogs warn.
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RIGHTS: No Safe Haven for Ugandan Girls
By Wambi Michael
KAMPALA - A year ago, a mother in Kashari County took the law into her own hands and castrated a man she caught raping her seven-year-old daughter.
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DR-CONGO: U.N.-Backed Troops Abusing Civilians, HRW Says
By Marina Litvinsky
WASHINGTON - United Nations-backed Congolese armed forces conducting intensified military operations in eastern and northern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) have failed to protect civilians from brutal rebel retaliatory attacks and instead are themselves attacking and raping Congolese civilians, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said Thursday.
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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