Empowering the Village to Raise the Child:

The Blog of the International Child Resource Institute


Archive for the ‘Maternal/Child Health’ Category

Separate and Unequal Education in Nepal

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

ICRI has been working in Nepal for over a decade.  In our projects focusing on education, health, and children’s rights we have seen incredible challenges facing disabled Nepali children and families.

Our National Center for Learning Resources program serves a number of schools where students have physical disabilities.  Our team has been able to effectively advocate for simple accommodations to allow these children to be integrated into the school with their peers.

As a new report from Human Rights Watch documents, however, many disabled Nepali children continue to be isolated and excluded from the country’s educational system.

(August 24, 2011) – Children with disabilities in Nepal face diverse and imposing barriers to getting a basic education, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. Schools are physically inaccessible, teachers are inadequately trained, and some children with disabilities are unjustly denied admission to neighborhood schools, Human Rights Watch found.

The 76-page report, “Futures Stolen: Barriers to Education for Children with Disabilities in Nepal,” documents the hurdles that children with disabilities face in obtaining a quality education in Nepal. Some children with disabilities experience abuse and neglect at home and in their communities, making it harder for them to gain access to schooling. These barriers result in low attendance and high dropout rates for children with disabilities compared with their non-disabled peers.

“Tens of thousands of children with disabilities in Nepal are being shut out from or neglected by the school system,” said Shantha Rau Barriga, disability rights researcher and advocate at Human Rights Watch. “TheNepalese education system needs to offer appropriate, quality education to all children, including those with disabilities.”

The Human Rights Watch report was based on interviews with nearly 100 disability advocates, teachers, government officials, and children or young people with disabilities and their families.

One of the children Human Rights Watch interviewed was 16-year-old Amman, who lives in the far-western region of Nepal. Because the local school entrance has two steep steps and no ramps, Amman has to crawl to reach his classroom. He cannot use the toilet without assistance and gets no support from school staff, so he either has to wait until he gets home, or another child has to run home to fetch his mother to assist him. Other children in the classroom are afraid to sit near him, so he sits alone in the corner.

Education Ministry officials acknowledge that a significant number of the more than 329,000 primary school aged children who are out of school in Nepal are children with disabilities. The government promotes an inclusive education policy, requiring communities to provide education to all children without discrimination. But many children with disabilities are not provided the support they need to attend community schools, and many schools are unprepared to teach children with disabilities.

Research shows that an inclusive approach to education can boost learning for all students and combat harmful stereotypes of people with disabilities. However, the government of Nepal relies upon segregated, and often inferior, classes for children with disabilities, and separate schools for children who have physical, sensory, or intellectual disabilities.

Many children with disabilities were turned away from schools entirely, Human Rights Watch found. More than half of the families with children with disabilities interviewed by Human Rights Watch reported that their children were denied admission to schools, both public and private. Many parents were not aware that their children had the right to attend school.

International donors and United Nations agencies are seemingly aware of the lack of targeted efforts to ensure that children with disabilities are in school. But they have not done enough to ensure that funding for education is distributed without discrimination and equitably benefits children with disabilities, Human Rights Watch said.

“As funding pours into Education For All programs in Nepal, the government, the UN and international donors need to make sure that children with disabilities are not excluded,” Barriga said. “The government and its partners need to have a clear plan for integrating children with disabilities, particularly intellectual or developmental disabilities, into mainstream schools.”

The curriculum in Nepal’s schools does not take into account differences in learning ability, so children with disabilities who are in mainstream schools repeatedly fail and are more likely to repeat a grade. One 15-year-old boy with a psychosocial disability told Human Rights Watch, “I spent three years in Class 1, then three years in Class 2, then one year in Class 3. But I don’t know the alphabet. The teacher just wrote my exams. That’s why I passed.”

As a result of the lack of educational options for some children with disabilities, lack of information about options, and schools’ refusals to admit children with disabilities, some parents said they saw no choice but to lock their children with disabilities in a room or tie them to a post.

The mother of one young boy with a developmental disability told Human Rights Watch, “I offer food and bring him tea. If he does toilet in the room, I clean it up. I have to take care of the whole house; I can’t just look after him. If I spend the whole day with him, my other child will miss his bus, everything will be in disarray.” She lets her son out of the room once or twice a day to see the sun.

The government of Nepal should revise teacher training materials, train all teachers about inclusive education methods, and improve monitoring of access to and the effectiveness of education for children with disabilities, Human Rights Watch said. The government and donors, working together, need to develop awareness-raising and educational campaigns about the right to education and other rights of people with disabilities. Parliament, in consultation with disabled peoples’ organizations, should comprehensively review all domestic legislation and make amendments to comply fully with the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Human Rights Watch said.

While it will take time for the school system to become fully inclusive of all children, the government needs to take steps toward this goal, Human Rights Watch said.

For example, the government needs to rethink the use of special resource classes, which are intended as a transition to mainstream schools but which effectively perpetuate segregation. Children in these classes range in age from 6 to 17, with some even in their 20s, and children often remain in these classes for years.

“Nepal needs to honor its obligations to protect the right of all children with disabilities to be educated in a safe, accessible, and non-discriminatory environment,” Barriga said. “Children with disabilities should not be left behind, locked up, or shut out from school and learning.”

- Human Rights Watch press release, 8/24/2011

Improving water sanitation and health in Kenya

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

At ICRI, we take a comprehensive approach to child advocacy.  We believe that children don’t exist in isolation, and any effort to assist children must also reach out to their family, school, and community.  Likewise, we attempt to look at the whole child, and to support efforts to help children with all aspects of their healthy development.

To that end, when we recently had the opportunity to partner with UNICEF to promote access to clean, safe drinking water in rural Kenya, we seized the opportunity!

We are so thrilled with the outcome of the resulting WASH Project (Water, Sanitation, and Health), which worked to improve sanitation and reduce incidence of waterborne diseases in Marsabit, Isiolo and Samburu, Kenya.

Now that the pilot project has been successfully completed, we are working on expansion and replication of the incredible work done by ICRI Africa and our community-based partners.  Improving access to clean, safe drinking water for children and families is an important step towards our goal of empowering the village to raise the child.

Check out this brief documentary to learn more about the WASH Project and ICRI Africa!

Gugu’s Story: Support for Women and Girls

Thursday, March 10th, 2011

Gugulethu Kumalo was born in Zimbabwe in 1989.  Known as “Gugu” by her friends and family, she was a bright and thoughtful child.  Gugu’s early years were stressful ones, however, as she endured the illnesses and eventual death of both her parents to AIDS.  When she was ten years old, Gugu and her brother moved into the home of their aunt and uncle, who eventually took both of the children for HIV tests.  The family was stunned when Gugu tested positive for the virus, while her brother did not.

As Gugu recalled, “I was only 12 years old when they told me.  I didn’t know if I had any future.  I didn’t understand what was happening to me.  I lived in fear and anger.”  Gugu and her family initially kept her HIV status a secret, afraid that they would otherwise be stigmatized or discriminated against in their community.  However, the secret took a toll on Gugu, who remembered feeling “completely alone.”  At school she was teased about the sores on her face resulting from an HIV-related infection, and other students refused to sit next to her.

Gugu became involved with the Champions for Life program, which runs camps for HIV-positive children in Zimbabwe.  Meeting other children and adults with HIV was a transformative experience.  “I realized that I wasn’t alone, and that my life wasn’t over but had just begun.  I realized I had to be strong, not only for me but for other children as well.”  By the time she reached the age of 16, Gugu had become an advocate for women and children with HIV.  She blossomed into a gifted leader and articulate spokesperson.  At the age of 20, she was invited to speak at the International AIDS Conference in Mexico City, on the topic of “Transitioning from Adolescence to Adulthood as a Young Person Living with HIV.”

Back at home in Zimbabwe, Gugu was frustrated by the lack of resources that young women with HIV faced.  She wanted to create a space where they could come together on a regular basis to support one another, educate themselves, and plan for their futures.  Gugu approached Rufaro Kangai, the Country Director of ICRI’s office in Harare.  Rufaro, a Zimbabwean who had previously worked in ICRI’s headquarters in California, moved back to Harare in 2007 to open ICRI’s office there.  Rufaro was impressed by Gugu’s commitment and leadership, and realized that there was a critical need for the type of program Gugu had envisioned.  Moreover, she realized that partering with Gugu was very much in “the ICRI way”- being invited to collaborate on a project with a local leader deeply connected to the community to be served.

Gugu soon joined the staff of ICRI’s Zimbabwe office, and with Rufaro developed the Support for Women and Girls Project.  The project offers an array of intensive services to young women, including support groups, individual counseling, educational workshops, tutoring, and vocational training.  Young women were soon flocking to the “safe space” at ICRI’s Harare office, and taking part in popular slumber parties that Rufaro and Gugu hosted to allow the young women “the opportunity to just be with each other and to just be themselves in a fun and supportive environment.”  Although the program has a particular focus on young women who are HIV-positive and young women who have endured sexual assault, both Rufaro and Gugu felt it was important to open the program up to any young woman in need of intensive advocacy and support.  Between 2008 and 2010, the SWAG project provided intensive services to over 80 young women, as well as trainings on the rights and needs of young women to over 400 community members.  The project has been incredibly successful, and due to strong demand has since expanded into other communities where ICRI is working in Zimbabwe.

Gugu died of AIDS-related complications in January 2010.  As Rufaro recalls, “Gugu’s death broke my heart.  She was a hero.  I still can’t believe all that she was able to accomplish in just 21 years.  The only way to heal the pain of losing someone like her is to carry out her vision and help other young women to live out their dreams the way she was able to.”  The Support for Women and Girls project would not exist without Gugu, and each young woman who receives help is directly benefitting from Gugu’s legacy.  As Gugu herself stated, “I realized that I mattered.  And I want others to know that they matter, too.”

ICRI Video

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

We are thrilled to officially announce the release of a new video about ICRI!

The film is under five minutes long, but we think it gives a great sense of the depth and breadth of ICRI’s work with children and families around the world.

Click on the image below to watch the video on YouTube.   Please take a look and let us know your thoughts!

Supporting Prisoners and their Children in Nepal

Monday, September 13th, 2010

Pokhara, Nepal is a major tourist destination, drawing travelers from around the globe who wish to explore the nearby Annapurna mountain range.  The center of the town is lined with shops, restaurants, and cafes overlooking the beautiful lake and the spectacular Himalayan peaks in the distance.

Just a short walk from the tourist area of town, however, lies a starkly different place.  Kaski Prison, Pokhara houses over 200 male and female prisoners.  There are also several young children living at the jail– in Nepal, a child under the age of 5 whose mother is incarcerated typically lives with her inside the prison.  Around the age of 5 these children are usually placed in group homes and foster homes throughout the country by Prisoners’ Assistance Nepal or one of the other organizations in the Network for Children, Prisoners, and Dependents (NCPD).

ICRI Nepal facilitated the formation of NCPD, a coalition of grassroots organizations working to support prisoners and their children, in 2001. We have remained deeply involved with the organization and with its efforts to improve the wellbeing of families impacted by Nepal’s prison system.

In recent years, ICRI Nepal and NCPD have received funding from the United Nations Development Programme and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime to implement HIV/AIDS prevention, vocational training, and psychosocial support programs at Kaski Prison Pokhara and in prisons elsewhere in Nepal.

I must admit that I had serious qualms about the idea of sending young children into a prison environment, where their health and education would likely be compromised.  After visiting Kaski Prison Pokhara and other Nepali jails, however, I looked at the situation in a somewhat different light.  Unlike prisons in the United States, which tend to isolate prisoners and discourage group affiliation, the Nepali prisoners live collectively.  The prisoners elect their own leaders, are responsible for much of their own care and support, and are encouraged to form affinity groups.  The young children residing in the prison freely interact with their mother and form strong attachments to her, and also received copious attention from their numerous “aunties” residing in the same cells.

Despite the hard work of ICRI Nepal, NCPD, and other NGOs, the Nepali prisons I visited were severely overcrowded and living conditions were quite dire.  Still, I was so proud of our extremely dedicated ICRI Nepal staff who work in Pokhara, Chitwan, and other locales.  They treat all prisoners and their families with dignity and respect, and have worked hard to design new and effective educational programs and income generating projects for the prisoners, such as mushroom farming and candle making.  Our UN-funded projects have been highly successful in increasing knowledge, skills, and behavior around HIV risk reduction and general health.  They also provide the prisoners with a chance to learn, to increase their skills, and to better provide for their families.  As one participating female inmate told me, “sometimes this is the only thing I have to look forward to.”

(ICRI Nepal staff working at Kaski Prison Pokhara)