INTERNATION DAY OF THE GIRL
CHILD-11OCTOBER
2014 Theme: Empowering Adolescent
Girls: Ending the Cycle of Violence
International Day of the Girl
Child is an
international observance day declared by the United Nations. October 11, 2011,
was the first Day of the Girl. The observation supports more opportunity for
girls and increases awareness of gender inequality faced by girls worldwide
based upon their gender. This inequality includes areas such as right to
education/access to education, nutrition, legal rights, medical care, and
protection from discrimination, violence against women and unfree child
marriage.The International Day of the Girl Child initiative began as a project
of Plan International, a non-governmental organization that operates worldwide.
The idea for an international day of observance and celebration grew out of
Plan International's Because I Am a Girl campaign,
which raises awareness of the importance of nurturing girls globally and in
developing countries in particular. Plan International representatives in
Canada approached the Canadian federal government to seek support for the
initiative..A
coalition of supporters raised awareness of the initiative internationally.
International Day of the Girl
Child was formally proposed as a resolution by Canada in the United Nations
General Assembly. Rona Ambrose,
Canada's Minister for the Status of Women, sponsored the resolution; a
delegation of women and girls made presentations in support of the initiative
at the 55th United Nations Commission
on the Status of Women .On December 19, 2011, the United Nations General
Assembly voted to pass a resolution adopting October 11, 2012 as the inaugural
International Day of the Girl Child.[1] Each year's Day of the Girl has a theme;
the first was "ending child marriage",[2] and the second, in 2013, was
"innovating for girl's education".[3] The resolution states that the Day of the
Girl recognizesOn December 19, 2011, the United Nations General Assembly
adopted Resolution 66/170 to declare 11 October as the International Day of the
Girl Child, to recognize girls’ rights and the unique challenges girls face
around the world.In recognition of the importance of investing in and
empowering girls during adolescence and preventing and eliminating the various
forms of violence they experience, the theme of International Day of the Girl
Child for 2014 is Empowering Adolescent Girls: Ending the Cycle of Violence.To
take efforts to end all forms of violence against girls and women to the next
level, it is important that we focus on adolescent girls and move beyond
awareness-raising to investments in and support for this critical group that
will shape the present and the future. Building on the United Nations
Secretary-General’s UNiTE to End Violence against Women campaign, we must look
at the opportunities initiatives such as Education for All and the global
movement to end child marriage provide to empower adolescent girls and must
ensure that they are protected from harm, are supported by family and friends,
and are able to act in their own interest. It is time to consolidate good
practice and focus on actions and results, paving the way for a more
gender-equitable post-2015 development agenda and review of progress against
the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action.
Governments, the UN
system, civil society, and public and private institutions are called on to
join forces and reaffirm their commitment to end the scourge of violence
against adolescent girls and to promote their empowerment by:Investing in
adolescent girls to equip them with skills, confidence, and life options:
through family, schools, technical and vocational education and training, and
health, social and economic support systems; Making infrastructure, services,
and technology accessible to girls and effective in meeting their needs for
safety, connectivity and mobility;Facilitating adolescent girls engagement in
civic, economic and political life;Continuing to advocate for making violence
against girls and women visible and unacceptable both in private and public
domains Strengthening data, measurement
and the evidence base in relation to the empowerment ofand violence against
adolescent girls.
Prof. John Kurakar
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