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We have gathered at
the World Summit for Children to undertake a
joint commitment and
to make an urgent
universal appeal - to
give every child a better
future.
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The children of the
world are innocent,
vulnerable and
dependent. They are
also curious, active and
full of hope. Their time should be one of joy and
peace, of playing, learning and growing. Their future
should be shaped in harmony and co-operation.
Their lives should mature, as they broaden their
perspectives and gain new experiences.
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But for many children, the reality of childhood is
altogether different.
The challenge
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Each day, countless children around the world
are exposed to dangers that hamper their growth
and development. They suffer immensely as
casualties of war and violence; as victims of racial
discrimination, apartheid, aggression, foreign
occupation and annexation; as refugees and
displaced children, forced to abandon their homes
and their roots; as disabled; or as victims of neglect,
cruelty and exploitation.
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Each day, millions of children suffer from the
scourges of poverty and economic crisis - from
hunger and homelessness, from epidemics and
illiteracy, from degradation of the environment. They
suffer from the grave effects of the problems of
external indebtedness and also from the lack of
sustained and sustainable growth in many developing
countries, particularly the least developed ones.
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Each day, 40,000 children die from malnutrition
and disease, including acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome (AIDS), from the lack of clean water and
inadequate sanitation and from the effects of the
drug problem.
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These are challenges that we, as political leaders,
must meet.
The opportunity
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Together, our nations have the means and the
knowledge to protect the lives and to diminish
enormously the suffering of children, to promote the
full development of their human potential and to
make them aware of their needs, rights and
opportunities. The Convention on the Rights of the
Child provides a new opportunity to make respect
for children's rights and welfare truly universal.
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Recent improvements in the international political
climate can facilitate this task. Through international
co- operation and solidarity it should now be
possible to achieve concrete results in many fields - to revitalize economic growth and development, to
protect the environment, to prevent the spread of
fatal and crippling diseases and to achieve greater
social and economic justice. The current moves
towards disarmament also mean that significant
resources could be released for purposes other than
military ones. Improving the well-being of children
must be a very high priority when these resources
are reallocated.
The task
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Enhancement of children's health and nutrition is
a first duty, and also a task for which solutions are
now within reach. The lives of tens of thousands of
boys and girls can be saved every day, because the
causes of their death are readily preventable. Child
and infant mortality is unacceptably high in many
parts of the world, but can be lowered dramatically
with means that are already known and easily
accessible.
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Further attention, care and support should be
accorded to disabled children, as well as to other
children in very difficult circumstances.
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Strengthening the role of women in general and
ensuring their equal rights will be to the advantage of
the world's children. Girls must be given equal
treatment and opportunities from the very beginning.
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At present, over 100 million children are without
basic schooling, and two-thirds of them are girls.
The provision of basic education and literacy for all
are among the most important contributions that can
be made to the development of the world's children.
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Half a million mothers die each year from causes
related to childbirth. Safe motherhood must be
promoted in all possible ways. Emphasis must be
placed on responsible planning of family size and on
child spacing. The family, as a fundamental group
and natural environment for the growth and
well-being of children, should be given all necessary
protection and assistance.
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All children must be given the chance to find
their identity and realize their worth in a safe and
supportive environment, through families and other
care-givers committed to their welfare. They must
be prepared for responsible life in a free society.
They should, from their early years, be encouraged
to participate in the cultural life of their societies.
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Economic conditions will continue to influence
greatly the fate of children, especially in developing
nations. For the sake of the future of all children, it is
urgently necessary to ensure or reactivate sustained
and sustainable economic growth and development
in all countries and also to continue to give urgent
attention to an early, broad and durable solution to
the external debt problems facing developing debtor
countries.
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These tasks require a continued and concerted
effort by all nations, through national action and
international co- operation.
The commitment
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The well-being of children requires political
action at the highest level. We are determined to
take that action.
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We ourselves hereby make a solemn
commitment to give high priority to the rights of
children, to their survival and to their protection and
development. This will also ensure the well-being of
all societies.
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We have agreed that we will act together, in
international co-operation, as well as in our
respective countries. We now commit ourselves to
the following 10-point programme to protect the
rights of children and to improve their lives:
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We will work to promote earliest possible
ratification and implementation of the Convention on
the Rights of the Child. Programmes to encourage
information about children's rights should be
launched world-wide, taking into account the
distinct cultural and social values in different
countries.
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We will work for a solid effort of national and
international action to enhance children's health, to
promote pre-natal care and to lower infant and child
mortality in all countries and among all peoples. We
will promote the provision of clean water in all
communities for all their children, as well as universal
access to sanitation.
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We will work for optimal growth and
development in childhood, through measures to
eradicate hunger, malnutrition and famine, and thus
to relieve millions of children of tragic sufferings in a world that has the means to feed all its citizens.
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We will work to strengthen the role and status of
women. We will promote responsible planning of
family size, child spacing, breastfeeding and safe
motherhood.
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We will work for respect for the role of the
family in providing for children and will support the
efforts of parents, other care-givers and
communities to nurture and care for children, from
the earliest stages of childhood through adolescence.
We also recognize the special needs of children who
are separated from their families.
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We will work for programmes that reduce
illiteracy and provide educational opportunities for
all children, irrespective of their background and
gender; that prepare children for productive
employment and lifelong learning opportunities, i.e.
through vocational training; and that enable children
to grow to adulthood within a supportive and
nurturing cultural and social context.
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We will work to ameliorate the plight of millions
of children who live under especially difficult
circumstances - as victims of apartheid and foreign
occupation; orphans and street children and children
of migrant workers; the displaced children and
victims of natural and man-made disasters; the
disabled and the abused, the socially disadvantaged
and the exploited. Refugee children must be helped
to find new roots in life. We will work for special
protection of the working child and for the abolition
of illegal child labour. We will do our best to ensure
that children are not drawn into becoming victims of
the scourge of illicit drugs.
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We will work carefully to protect children from
the scourge of war and to take measures to prevent
further armed conflicts, in order to give children
everywhere a peaceful and secure future. We will
promote the values of peace, understanding and
dialogue in the education of children. The essential
needs of children and families must be protected
even in times of war and in violence- ridden areas.
We ask that periods of tranquillity and special relief
corridors be observed for the benefit of children,
where war and violence are still taking place.
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We will work for common measures for the
protection of the environment, at all levels, so that all
children can enjoy a safer and healthier future.
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We will work for a global attack on poverty,
which would have immediate benefits for children's
welfare. The vulnerability and special needs of the
children of the developing countries, and in
particular the least developed ones, deserve priority.
But growth and development need promotion in all
States, through national action and international
co-operation. That calls for transfers of appropriate
additional resources to developing countries as well
as improved terms of trade, further trade
liberalization and measures for debt relief. It also
implies structural adjustments that promote world
economic growth, particularly in developing
countries, while ensuring the well-being of the most
vulnerable sectors of the populations, in particular
the children.
The next steps
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The World Summit for Children has presented
us with a challenge to take action. We have agreed
to take up that challenge.
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Among the partnerships we seek, we turn
especially to children themselves. We appeal to
them to participate in this effort.
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We also seek the support of the United Nations
system, as well as other international and regional
organizations, in the universal effort to promote the
well-being of children. We ask for greater
involvement on the part of non- governmental
organizations, in complementing national efforts and
joint international action in this field.
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We have decided to adopt and implement a
Plan of Action, as a framework for more specific
national and international undertakings. We appeal
to all our colleagues to endorse that Plan. We are
prepared to make available the resources to meet
these commitments, as part of the priorities of our
national plans.
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We do this not only for the present generation,
but for all generations to come. There can be no
task nobler than giving every child a better future.
New York, 30 September 1990
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