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GLOBAL CALL TO STOP HITTING CHILDREN: DENVER, COLORADO (July 7) The global campaign to end all corporal punishment of children, including in the family, is making rapid progress as UN human rights bodies and high-level courts in many countries condemn it. An international seminar on "Global Progress Towards Ending All Corporal Punishment of Children" in Denver, Colorado today (SUNDAY JULY 7) challenged all governments to stop defending - or disguising as discipline - deliberate violence against children and to accept that children, like adults, have fundamental human rights not to be assaulted. Meeting on the eve of the 14th International Congress on Child Abuse and Neglect, experts and campaigners from the US, Latin America, Africa, Asia, Europe and the Pacific region also urged all those working in child protection systems in all states to advocate abolition of all corporal punishment as a key strategy for securing children's safety. The seminar is co-organised by the Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children, EPOCH-USA and Save the Children Sweden. Peter Newell, Joint Coordinator of the Global Initiative, comments: "It's crazy that in most countries children, smaller and more vulnerable than the rest of us, still have less legal protection from being hit than adults. It is only adult hypocrisy and political cowardice which cling to this disreputable habit. But things are really moving now in all continents". ABOLITION IN OVER 90 COUNTRIES UN COMMITTEE CONDEMNS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT RESEARCH STUDIES CONDEMN HITTING CHILDREN One of the most comprehensive analyses of research into the effects of corporal punishment was published in the latest edition of the American Psychological Association's journal. Its author, Dr. Elizabeth Gershoff writes: "Americans need to re-evaluate why we believe it is reasonable to hit young, vulnerable children, when it is against the law to hit other adults, prisoners and even animals". Dr. Gershoff will be attending the conference. Another speaker at the seminar, Professor Joan Durrant, Head of the Department of Family Studies at the University of Manitoba (Winnipeg, Canada) will summarise recent research into young children's views of corporal punishment: children themselves are beginning to speak out and say how much corporal punishment hurts them, and not just physically. KEY JUDGMENTS The seminar will hear of key judgments from supreme and constitutional courts (for example in Israel, Italy, India, South Africa) and the European Court of Human Rights which have condemned corporal punishment. Most recently, earlier this year in Fiji an appeal court held: "Children have rights no wit inferior to the rights of adults. Fiji has ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Our Constitution also guarantees fundamental rights to every person. Government is required to adhere to principles respecting the rights of all individuals, communities and groups. By their status as children, children need special protection. Our educational institutions should be sanctuaries of peace and creative enrichment, not places for fear, ill-treatment and tampering with the human dignity of students...". The Court quashed a sentence of corporal punishment and in addition declared that corporal punishment in the penal system and in schools is unconstitutional and unlawful. To reach the following, call the Center for Effective Discipline (614) 221-8829 or contact them July 6-9 at the Denver Adams Mark Hotel voice message service at: 303-893-3333 Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children: Launched in 2001, it aims to accelerate progress towards ending all corporal punishment. See www.endcorporalpunishment.org The seminar is being held at the Adams Mark Hotel, Denver. Correspondents are welcome to attend and there will be opportunities to interview speakers. |