Dear Editor,
Recently, the Jamaican prime minister, Portia Simpson Miller, addressed the issues of child abuse and neglectful parents. She added that the State was going to do everything in its power to hold negligent parents accountable. No one can argue with her on this point, as all well thinking Jamaicans will concur that we must do more to eradicate child abuse as a scourge affecting the society.
However, one issue which was not mentioned by the prime minister, and which was probably an oversight, is the State's neglect of its children. There are many places of safety or children's homes which are underfunded. In fact, too many of these institutions lack the required financial resources to impact the lives of their wards in a meaningful way. This is also a form of abuse. The continued shortfall is budgetary support from the State lends itself to child abuse, as in many instances these children are not adequately supervised due to the lack of personnel. As a result their development and full potential are hijacked by the State's unwillingness to adequately allocate the resources necessary. We also need to increase funding to all the agencies of the State with deal with children's rights, such as the Child Development Agency, in order to support the rights and interests of our children.
A second form of State neglect comes in the form of Jamaica's education system. There are different categories of schools as perceived by the general public. There are schools of first choice and then they are schools of last resort. These schools of last resorts are underfunded and spread across the inner cities of Jamaica. In fact, for the most part, these schools are left on their own. The students who attend such schools fare worse off than their counterparts not because they do not have qualified teachers, but due mainly because of the politics involved in Jamaica's education system. This negative political cultural practice is carried out by both major political parties as they both reward mediocrity and political allegiance to the detriment of national and sustainable development.
Who will hold the government accountable for its neglect of the nation's children? The magnitude of Jamaica's child abuse cases is recorded in the report from the Office of the Children's Registry. According to the Office of the Children's Registry, between January to September of 2013, there were 8,527 reports of child abuse, which is most alarmingly. Until we become serious about addressing the issues of child abuse and parental neglect we will continue to move from crisis to crisis. The time has come for us to become proactive.
Wayne Campbell
waykam@yahoo.com
@WayneCamo
Who will punish State child abuse, neglect?
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Recently, the Jamaican prime minister, Portia Simpson Miller, addressed the issues of child abuse and neglectful parents. She added that the State was going to do everything in its power to hold negligent parents accountable. No one can argue with her on this point, as all well thinking Jamaicans will concur that we must do more to eradicate child abuse as a scourge affecting the society.
However, one issue which was not mentioned by the prime minister, and which was probably an oversight, is the State's neglect of its children. There are many places of safety or children's homes which are underfunded. In fact, too many of these institutions lack the required financial resources to impact the lives of their wards in a meaningful way. This is also a form of abuse. The continued shortfall is budgetary support from the State lends itself to child abuse, as in many instances these children are not adequately supervised due to the lack of personnel. As a result their development and full potential are hijacked by the State's unwillingness to adequately allocate the resources necessary. We also need to increase funding to all the agencies of the State with deal with children's rights, such as the Child Development Agency, in order to support the rights and interests of our children.
A second form of State neglect comes in the form of Jamaica's education system. There are different categories of schools as perceived by the general public. There are schools of first choice and then they are schools of last resort. These schools of last resorts are underfunded and spread across the inner cities of Jamaica. In fact, for the most part, these schools are left on their own. The students who attend such schools fare worse off than their counterparts not because they do not have qualified teachers, but due mainly because of the politics involved in Jamaica's education system. This negative political cultural practice is carried out by both major political parties as they both reward mediocrity and political allegiance to the detriment of national and sustainable development.
Who will hold the government accountable for its neglect of the nation's children? The magnitude of Jamaica's child abuse cases is recorded in the report from the Office of the Children's Registry. According to the Office of the Children's Registry, between January to September of 2013, there were 8,527 reports of child abuse, which is most alarmingly. Until we become serious about addressing the issues of child abuse and parental neglect we will continue to move from crisis to crisis. The time has come for us to become proactive.
Wayne Campbell
waykam@yahoo.com
@WayneCamo
Who will punish State child abuse, neglect?
-->