Speech before the Los Angeles World Affairs Council on January
10, 2001:
CAROL
BELLAMY
Executive Director, UNICEF
I am
delighted to join you today — and honored by this opportunity to address the
Council — an organization that, in the course of 48 years of service, has
established itself as one of America’s pre-eminent forums on the most
important issues of our time.
There is,
of course, no shortage of such issues.
A Martian
landing in the middle of this country’s memorable presidential campaign might
have come away thinking that there were at least four overarching issues of our
time: tax cuts, prescription drugs, a missile defense system — and who looked
better on Oprah.
But as
this audience is well aware, the full list is somewhat longer, even if we
somehow failed to include California’s own energy crisis, which is serious
indeed.
It takes
in such vast perennial problems as poverty, inequity, discrimination,
environmental degradation, social upheaval, joblessness, terrorism and natural
disasters —all of them issues with global repercussions, regardless of the
day-to-day attention that is, and is often not, paid them by politicians and the
mainstream media.
Yet there
I would submit that there is one issue that is not only relevant to every major
global problem, but that is also implicit in the solution of each — and that
is the well-being of the world’s children.
Ladies and
Gentlemen, it is hard to find a responsible public official who does not
understand in his or her bones that the future of every nation is directly
linked to the future of its children — and that by investing in children and
in the families that sustain them, a nation is ultimately investing in its own
development.
Children
are the bearers of our common future. The entire community of nations
acknowledged as much when they embraced the 1989 Convention on the Rights of the
Child — and vowed, a decade ago, to full-fill the goals of the World Summit
for Children.
Thanks to
their determination and the work of countless other dedicated people, including
non-governmental groups and the business community (many of them UNICEF
partners), the world has witnessed triumphs for children and their families on a
scale unlike any other.
Because of
the Convention cit the Rights of the Child, there is now widespread recognition
that every child, no matter how poor or otherwise marginalized, has a
whole galaxy of fundamental rights: the right to health and nutrition, to a
primary education of good quality, especially for girls; to clean water and
adequate sanitation, to gender equality; and to freedom from exploitation and
abuse.
Moreover,
children have a right to have a name and a nationality — as well as to express
themselves freely and, in line with their evolving capacities, to participate in
decisions that affect them.
This wide
recognition of the rights of children is not merely rhetorical — far from
As a
result, the 1 990s were a time of remarkable progress toward the World Summit
goals in a variety of areas — including gains in child immunization that have
brought polio to the brink of eradication; the widespread prevention of iodine
deficiency disorders through salt iodisation; access to primary education;
widespread provision of Vitamin A supplements, and the promotion of
breastfeeding standards.
But for
all the millions of young lives that have been saved, and for all the futures
that have been enhanced, these triumphs fall far short of the promises that
governments made to children in 1990.
As we
crossed into the new Millennium, children under the age of 5
were still dying at the rate of 11 million a year, all from preventable
causes like diarrhea, measles, and acute respiratory infections, while 170
million children are malnourished, often at a cost of developmental handicaps
that can last a lifetime; over 100 million children, the majority of them girls,
never see the inside of a school; and I out of every 10 children have serious
disabilities.
And this
toll is occurring in the face of daunting new challenges. Deepening poverty and
inequity remain immense obstacles to human development, including the burden of
external debt; gender discrimination and violence, environmental degradation,
terrorism, and natural disasters.
These have
been joined in recent years by the explosive spread of HI V/AIDS, as Dr. David
Baltimore of CalTech so graphically described to you in his presentation in
November — to which must be added the proliferation of armed conflict and
related problems like anti-personnel land mines, the spread of small arms, and
the merciless recruitment of child soldiers, whose re-integration into society
poses immense difficulties.
Yet for
all of these horrors, I submit that we now stand at the most opportune moment
imaginable for reaching the remaining goals that were set at the World Summit
for Children — and for mobilizing a global alliance dedicated to achieving a
breakthrough in human development based on specific actions for children.
Thomas
Edison, in one of his rare non-working moments, was once quoted as saying that
“we don’t know half of one-millionth of I per cent about anything.”
He may
have been right at the time he made his remark, in the 1930s. But it is safe to
say that since then, human knowledge and understanding have increased somewhat.
We may even have broken the 1 percent mark.
Whatever
the number, we know a great deal more today about how best to ensure the rights
of children and address their needs. And certainly one of the biggest light
bulbs to go off above our heads is the knowledge, borne out by the latest
scientific research and affirmed by years of practical experience, that what
happens to children in the earliest years of their lives is absolutely crucial
not only to their future, but to the future ~f all our societies.
We know,
too, that it is crucial to ensure that every girl and boy receives a primary
education of good quality; and that every adolescent is afforded ample
opportunity to develop and to participate meaningfully in society.
Ladies and
Gentlemen, the future is in our hands as never before.
For if we
know anything, it is that in a $30 trillion global economy, the knowledge, the
resources and the strategies already exist to give children the best possible
start in life, educate them, and help them navigate the complex passage from
adolescence to adulthood — outcomes that are crucial first steps if we are to
break the endless cycle of global poverty.
As Secretary-General Kofi Annan has pointed out in his foreword to
UNICEF’s annual Report, The State of the
World’s Children 2001, assuring every child a good start in life is where
we must begin, because a healthy and happy child is a child who is ready for
school and learning.
Every year, some 129 million babies around the world begin an
extraordinary developmental sprint — from defenseless new-horns to pro-active
3-year-olds. Arid every year, countless numbers of them are stopped in their
tracks — deprived, in one way or another, of the love, care, nurturing,
health, nutrition and safe environment that they need to grow, develop — and
to learn.
The need to protect and nurture children in early childhood should merit
the highest priority when governments make decisions about laws, policies,
programs and money. Yet, tragically, both for children and for countries, these
are the years that receive the least attention.
We now know, for example, that the first 36 months of a child’s life
are when neural connections in the brain are at a crucial stage, ready to be
developed through social and physical interactions and enriched by good
nutrition and health — or left to atrophy.
These are not just any neural cells — they are the connections that enable a
child to perceive the world, to walk and talk, to remember experiences, learn
skills, feel emotion, establish and maintain social relations and make
decisions. All of this has been confirmed by neuroscientists and others — and
by the bands-on experience that UNICEF and its partners have amassed in working
with children.
Indeed, early childhood care is an approach that includes a broader
definition of care than what we have used in the past, one that encompasses the
practices and actions not only of a child’s mother or health-care worker, but
the entirety of a child’s world - his or her home and family, community,
country and culture.
It includes the basic premise that caring for the child means supporting the
crucial role of parents and families in ensuring the right of all children to
grow up in a safe, stable and nurturing environment.
This includes caring for the mother, and caring about the conditions she
faces at home and in society at large. For in societies where women have no
voice, limited access to resources, little or no legal protection and no
respect~, optimal child development is impossible.
It also means supporting the role of men, who must address these issues
if we are to dispel the attitudes that create inequality and that reduce women
and children to second-class citizens.
Early childhood care also means that UNICEF and its partners must continue to
build on our decades of experience about what good care for children means: that
they receive sound nutrition, beginning with the enormous benefits that are
conferred by breastfeeding; that they have access to safe drinking water,
uncontaminated food and unpolluted air. That they live where there is adequate
sanitation and waste-disposal
Early child care also means building on the last decade of learning that we have
amassed in promoting implementation of the Conviction on the Rights of the
Child, This is knowledge that has been tested in the real world — about caring
for, and empowering children by providing them with love and affection, in
environments where they can explore and discover and learn skills that they can
use throughout their lives.
Ladies and Gentlemen, providing all this would be a formidable challenge
at army time, It is especially daunting now, when so many past advances for
children are being undermined by poverty, and by armed conflict and infectious
diseases, especially HIV/AIDS and malaria.
That is why UNICEF is calling on governments to reduce the burden of
external debt so that impoverished countries can invest in children instead of
debt service; and why we are urging them to redirect resources within their
national budgets for early childhood development programs.
It is why the global community must work harder to end armed conflict,
and ensure that resources are invested in children, not armaments. It is why we
are calling on leaders at all levels to redouble their efforts to end
discrimination against women.
It is why we are asking governments, civil society organizations and the private
sector, including corporations and the media industry, to join in waging an
all-out battle against the spread of HI V/AIDS.
And it is why UNICEF is working to mobilize governments and citizens of
every nation, including families, communities, and civil society organizations,
to carry the banner of a Global Movement for Children — an unstoppable crusade
to end, at long last, the poverty, ill health, violence and discrimination that
has needlessly blighted and destroyed so many young lives.
It is an effort that we have every expectation will lend an extra push to
a major event that will occur at the United Nations in September — the General
Assembly’s Special Session for Children, which will offer an unparalleled
opportunity not only to review a decade’s worth of progress for children at
the highest level — but to re-energize the international commitment to
realizing a global vision for children now and in the years to come.
Building that alliance is a obviously vast undertaking. It entails
enlisting the active support not only of established leaders, but people of
influence representing all of civil society, from non-governmental
organizations, religious groups and business and private enterprise to
people’s movements, academia and the media, community arid grassroots groups,
families — and children themselves.
Thanks to former President Nelson Mandela of South Africa and his wife,
Graca Machel, the former Education Minister of Mozambique, the work has already
begun. They have assumed a direct and personal role in organizing a global
partnership of leaders from every sphere to act on a basic recognition — that
if we want a more just, equitable and thriving world, we must invest in children
now.
I fervently believe that together we can build that. world —secure in the
knowledge that in serving the best interests of children, we serve the best
interests of all humanity.
Thank you.