SPARC Forms CRC in Balakot

In an effort to increase outreach to children in difficult circumstances, SPARC has established a Child Rights Committee in Balakot.

The CRC will focus on education, children in jails as well as bonded labor. It will send recommendations and suggestions to SPARC head office for interventions.

SPARC has been working in Balakot since the earthquake that hit the area in 2005. It was the first organization to set up a Fun Center for children, who had lost everything, to help them get over the trauma of death and destruction.

 

 

Girls’ School Set on Fire in Quetta

QUETTA: August 4: Unidentified assailants set fire to furniture, records, a computer lab and other valuables at a private girls’ school in Khilji Colony, Sariab Road in the early hours of August 3, police said.

Assailants entered the school and used petrol to start fires inside the rooms, setting ablaze the furniture, computers, and other valuables.

They also broke doors of the classrooms and threw several computers into a water tank on the school premises. There was no watchman at the school.

It is the first time that a girls’ school has come under attack in the city. No group has so far claimed responsibility. A case has been registered at Sariab police station.

 

Swat Militants Burn Down 48 Girls Schools during 2007-08

MINGORA, August 4: Authorities in Swat said that 48 girls’ schools had been burned down or blown up during 2007-08 and many schools had been closed. Five girls’ schools and a government office were set ablaze in Swat on August 3 while security forces claimed to have killed 15 militants during an operation in the Sijband area.

Intensifying their campaign against educational institutions, the militants torched the five schools in Gali Bagh, Taligram and Malam Jaba. The office of the agriculture development project was also torched.

 

Study Proposed on Jirgas-for-Juveniles Option

KARACHI: June 19: UNICEF wants to conduct a study on the ‘Access to Informal Justice System in Pakistan’ in collaboration with the Law and Justice Commission of Pakistan (LJCP).
The study is aimed at finding an alternate justice system for juvenile prisoners. The study will assess the possibility of recommending the traditional ‘jirga’ and ‘panchayat’ system as an alternative, in order to protect juvenile offenders from facing the formal criminal justice system.

“A majority of the cases involving petty crimes are decided through the informal justice system prevalent in the country, therefore, a study on the ‘Access to Informal Justice System in Pakistan’ will be arranged,” the LJCP stated in an official letter addressed to the registrar of the Sindh High Court. An assessment will be carried out on the formal judicial process to explore whether the judiciary resorts to diverting the child away from the proceedings of the criminal justice system or engages alternative dispute resolution methods for protecting the child from facing the system.

 

Four Minor Workers Die in Fireworks Explosion

LAHORE: June 24: Four child laborers were killed and three injured when explosives went off in the fireworks factory in Lahore.

The children were aged between 10-14 years. The explosion took place despite the fact that the Punjab government has banned the business.

The owner went into hiding to avoid arrest. Fireworks material was lying in the factory’s courtyard where children were present. It caught fire due to unknown reasons. Seven children received severe burns and were rushed to the hospital while the condition of others was reported to be critical.

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SPARC has been holding consultations at the grassroots level for the past seven years or so. Several participants at these consultations would ask SPARC about follow-up, as they became enthusiastic about child rights issues and wanted to begin activities in their local areas.

Consequently, about two years ago, SPARC started to organize CRCs (Child Rights Committees) in various districts of the Frontier and the Punjab Provinces. These Committees, now formed in about 40 districts, are expected by SPARC to function as a focal point for child rights issues in their respective areas; and presently consist of voluntary groups of activists who independently follow up on related issues in their locality. This network will soon expand to Sindh, after SPARC opens its office in that Province.

Recently re-organized, the CRCs sign contracts with SPARC under which they agree to undertake certain tasks and activities in their respective districts to promote and protect child rights. SPARC in turn provides the CRC with literature, capacity-building training and an honorarium to cover some operational expenses. The CRCs are expected also to mobilize resources locally and to initiate their own activities to promote and protect child rights.

The CRCs have worked closely with SPARC on a number of issues, including child labor and juvenile justice, to raise awareness at the grassroots level among the general public and also among the authorities concerned with each of these issues.

It has also been important to SPARC that it strengthens and develops the capacity of the CRCs to raise awareness, advocate for child rights and respond to child rights issues in their respective areas. By collaborating with the CRCs and like-minded civil society organizations, SPARC hopes that the promotion and protection of child rights will become a social movement with increased sustainability and multiplied impact.

The responsibilities of the CRCs include:
   

To act as a focal point for all child rights issues in the district.

To arrange legal aid for children in conflict with the law.

To keep in close contact with officials associated with child rights-related work, such as probation officers, police, labor inspectors, education officer and health officers, etc.

To highlight child rights issues in the media,maintaining a close working relationship with local journalists.

To conduct investigation and fact-finding missions in all matters involving child rights.

To make monthly visits to the juvenile sections of the jails.
To campaign against corporal punishment in schools and violence in general against children.
To campaign against domestic child labor.
To report child rights violations to SPARC, the Federal and Provincial Governments and concerned officials.

Get involved with the Child Rights Committee in your district!

If there is no Child Rights Committee in your District, contact the SPARC Office in your province to find out how to form one.

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