Showing posts with label Filipino Children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Filipino Children. Show all posts

Friday, August 3, 2012

Quality Television Programs For Children

MANILA, Philippines — The protection and promotion of children’s rights and privileges are embodied in Republic Act (RA) 8370, the Children’s Television Act of 1997, providing access for Filipino children to quality television programs that are creative, informative, educational, and entertaining.

TV is the next most powerful tool in shaping the minds of children, second only to the family. The child absorbs images subliminally and unconsciously. A study showed that preschoolers spend several hours a week watching television.

“We should not leave parenting to television. It is a fundamental obligation of adults and a social responsibility of networks to actively pursue child-friendly programming that can have a lasting imprint on the minds of our young. No country can claim to be fully-developed and educated without caring for its children,” Department of Education Secretary Armin A. Luistro said at the launching of the Implementing Rules and Regulations for RA 8370 on July 17, 2012.

The IRR stipulates that 15 percent of daily airtime on all local TV networks should be allotted for child-friendly television shows. Child-friendly shows are given incentives, such as being exempted from review by the MTRCB. Child-friendly TV programs are shown between 6 a.m. and 9 p.m. news programs must censor sensitive or violent images. Parents, guardians, and caretakers are advised to monitor which television shows are fit for children.

We congratulate the Officials of the Philippine Government, headed by President Benigno S. Aquino III and Vice President Jejomar C. Binay; Department of Education, headed by Secretary Armin A. Luistro; Movie and Television Review and Classification Board, led by Chairperson Mary Grace P. Llamanzares; National Council for Children’s Television, led by Chairman Mag Cruz Hatol, other Officials and Personnel, for the efforts to safeguard the well-being and welfare of Filipino children. We wish them all the best and success in all endeavors. MABUHAY!

source: mb.com.ph

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

3 million Filipino children in hazardous work


About 3 million Filipino children are employed in the most hazardous forms of work, the latest survey of the National Statistics Office (NSO) shows.

Based on the 2011 Survey on Children of the NSO released to the public on Tuesday, the current number of children working in hazardous jobs grew from 2.4 million back in 2001.

Of the 29 million Filipino children (aged 5-17 years old), 5.5 million are employed in various forms of labor.

More boys are employed in dangerous work compared to girls, the study revealed. About 66.8 percent of child workers in hazardous work are boys, while 33.2 percent are girls.

Regions with the highest incidence of hazardous child labor are also some of the poorest areas in the country, which includes Central Luzon (10.6 percent), Bicol (10.2 percent), Western Visayas (8.5 percent), Northern Mindanao (8.2 percent) and Central Visayas (7.3 percent).

“We have to get to the root of child labour which is linked with poverty and lack of decent and productive work,” said Director Lawrence Jeff Johnson of the International Labour Organization (ILO) Country Office for the Philippines.

The ILO defined hazardous child work as “being likely to harm children's health, safety, or morals by its nature or circumstances.”

“Children may be directly exposed to obvious work hazards such as sharp tools or poisonous chemicals. Other hazards for child labourers may be less apparent, such as the risk of abuse or problems resulting from long hours of work,” the ILO said in a statement.

But the group clarified that the NSO study cannot be compared with previous statistics since it was conducted with the revised definition and terms under Republic Act 9231 on the worst forms of child labor enacted in 2003 and international statistical standards adopted in 2008.

It also said that the survey cannot give a complete and detailed picture of Filipino children trafficked for work, undergo sexual exploitation, or are in armed conflict.

“One of the recommendations is to conduct the survey every 5 years to immediately find solutions and provide interventions. Results of this survey will be used as targets for interventions both geographically and among specific groups by industry occupations, “ Johnson said.

The recent study by the NSO alarmed the Federation of Free Workers (FFW), one of the largest and oldest labor federations in the country.

“We are left with no choice but to double our efforts and find better ways to implement programs to get children out of child labor, especially those in hazardous work,” said Julius Cainglet, Assistant Vice President of the FFW.

Cainglet echoed the ILO's commitment in combating the continued rise of Filipino child laborers and their exposure to more hazardous work.

The ILO launched on Tuesday the Batang Malaya: Child labor free Philippines campaign, a nationwide drive geared towards the global deadline of ending the worst forms of child labour by 2016.

Under the campaign, the ILO seeks the following actions:

- Institutionalize the Survey on Children to regularly monitorprogress.

- Strengthen and rationalize the operations of the National Child LaborCommittee by giving it a legal mandate, budget and a dedicated secretariat.

- Improve enforcement of RA 9231 to ensure that all persons found to beengaging children in the worst forms of child labour are penalized.

- Expand the reach and strengthen the capacity of the labourinspectorate to monitor child labour even in unregulated sectors.

- Mainstream child labour in local development plans and integrate asconditionality in programmes to reduce poverty including conditionalcash transfers.

According to the ILO, there are 215 million children trapped in child labor worldwide, 115 million of them were in the worst forms of child labor in 2010.

source: interaksyon.com