Rivers
Parliament Alerts Over Child Hawking
The Children Parliament in Rivers State, has raised alarm over the swelling level of child hawking in the state, and decried the non-implementation of Child Rights Act.
Speaker of the Parliament, Miss Helen Clifford, made the observation at the weekend during a phone-in media programme organized by the Silverbird Communications in Port Harcourt.
Miss Clifford said number of children engaged in street trading has continued to grow due to non-enforcement of the Child Rights Act, two years after it was passed into law by the state government.
On the theme of this year’s Children’s Day, “Good Governance, the Impact on the Nigerian Child”, Helen Clifford argued that not much has been achieved by those in authority to reduce the plight of children, with the backdrop of high poverty rate in the country.
She contended that with the poverty rate still soaring high, children are the worst hit as a lot of them are now contributing to the upkeep of their homes through street trading and hawking.
Miss Clifford harped on the five pillars of the Child Rights Act including survival, development, participation and protection of the child, saying that the pillars provide towards ameliorating the plights of children.
The Rivers Children Parliament Speaker stated that government need to wake up to its responsibilities by enforcing the rights of the child saying, “the problem of survival in many homes have been responsible for the high rate of street trading by children”.
In her view, Children Parliament Representative from Obio/Akpor, Miss. Abigail Ejekwu, called for the establishment of Children Rehabilitation Centres fitted with recreational and educational facilities to engage them properly.
Miss Ejekwu believed that if the theme of this year’s Children Day is weighed against the backdrop of the situation of children in the country, not much has been done to ameliorate the problems of children in society.
She, therefore, canvassed for more sensitization and enlightenment on parents and guardians to educate them on the rights of the child in both the local government and schools across the state.