UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy commended
the Sri Lanka's initiative to launch the National
Plan of Action for Children that proposes to build
a better world for them, fulfilling a commitment
made by the world leaders at the UN special assembly
session in 2002. Bellamy said "she was glad
to see
Sri Lanka going ahead with its commitment"
with a program outlining how they work towards achieving
the targets in the global plan prepared at the Special
session in 2002, when she called upon the President
Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga at her hotel
in New York yesterday. Bellamy said she was happy
to note that Sri Lanka is hosting the forthcoming
Regional
Conference on Commercial Exploitation of Children
in Colombo next month.
The Action Plan proposes to enhance child development
sector covering the areas of education, healthcare,
water supply, child protection, child labour and
juvenile justice. Some key objectives of the program
is to ensure pre school participation of children
in the age group from 3-5 from 62 % to 80 %, reduce
all forms of child abuse, proper investigation,
monitoring and legal reforms and to improve quality
of care, protection and rehabilitation for children
in institutional care, etc. The government has already
allocated Rs.100 million for this purpose and UNICEF
Chief assured their assistance for the program that
will continue for a period of four years from 2004
to 2008.
President Kumaratunga has explained that the country
needed UNICEF support to set apart a comprehensive
mechanism to address the issue of psychological
trauma in war affected families, orphans and widows
in the North and East as well as in the southern
parts of the country. She has said this was a key
issue threatening the future of her country, struggling
to recover from a long dragged ethnic conflict that
left 23,000 soldiers disabled and many more traumaticed.
UNICEF Chief has agreed to send in experts in this
special field of counseling to train Sri Lankans,
in response to a request by the President who explained
that Sri Lanka lacked proper expertise in this field
of therapy.
President Kumaratunga said "the current UNICEF
country representative who was a dynamic and efficient
personality has made a large contribution in furthering
children's rights in Sri Lanka and has made good
progress in".