Keynote
Speech by H. E. Mr. Anand Panyarachun UNICEF Ambassador
for Thailand at the Regional Consultation on "Challenging the New
Millennium: The Rights of the Child and Issues of Displacement in Southeast
Asia" Siam City Hotel January 26, 2000 In my capacity
as the UNICEF Ambassador for Thailand, I would like to extend our warmest welcome
to the delegations from countries in our Southeast Asian Region, our friends from
South Asia who share some of the same problems and concerns, and others from Asia.
I am pleased to see the trend that we are increasingly thinking of us as one Asian
group. I would also like to extend our congratulations to the National Youth
Bureau, the organizer of this regional consultation, for taking the initiative
in bringing together all of us. I am aware that the National Youth Bureau, together
with UNICEF is monitoring the status of Thai children and initiates follow-up
action to take remedial measures. It is important to have opportunities
for concerned Government agencies, NGOs and particularly youth, our stakeholders,
from the two Asian regions, as well as UN agencies to have dialogues on important
issues such as the one we are focussing on today. I recall in an earlier
occasion, over two years ago, I had the opportunity to appear before some of you
who are from the Mekong Sub-Region, addressing the gathering of concerned Government
and NGOs representatives on the "Illegal Labour Movements: the Case of Trafficking
in Women and Children". It is encouraging to know that actions taken
to tackle the problem of trafficked children, who are categorized as displaced
children, are being reported here at this meeting and in a wider context of child
rights and displacement in Southeast Asia. The persistence in combating the violations
of the rights of displaced and trafficked children and sustenance of the interest
and efforts in promoting Child Rights by all of you is highly commendable. The
expanded scope of deliberations of this meeting in the agenda - seems ambitious.
I hope it will help us understand better the situation of refugee children, displaced
and cross-border trafficked children and to come up with ways and cooperation
in recommending solutions to the problems at all levels. In view of the apparent
complexity and difficulties concerning the situation of such children in the Region,
this is a very timely consultation. For example, in September last year,
UNICEF reported that as many as 500,000 people were displaced from their homes
and facing severe nutritional and health risks in Timor. Among this number, some
75,000 were estimated to be under the age of five. Thailand, on the other hand,
has been both the sending and receiving country as far as trafficking of children
is concerned in this region. Several reports have shown the rising number
of children victims of trafficking for labour and sexual exploitation from our
neighbouring countries, particularly in the Mekong Sub-region, and most notably
from Myanmar, China, Laos, and Cambodia. Also in Thailand, there are some
150,000 children from the hill tribes born in the country and categorized as children
without nationality and often even birth registration. So are a number of sea
gypsies along the Southern coast. This includes illegal foreign child workers
who are working in deep sea fishing in Pattani province. What can we do
about such children is a question that needs to be answered, taking into account
multiple dimensions such as human and child rights, humanitarian concerns, political
issues, legal and constitutional provisions, economic and social implications
etc. Efforts are being made by all of you to find long-term solutions to these
problems. One country cannot do it alone as they are inter-related and emerging
from the multiplicity of root causes. It calls for all of us to share among us
the issues of concern and to seek ways to tackle them together. This calls for
not only national, but bilateral and regional agreements, directions and concrete
plans of action to advance the progress. In these efforts, it is important
to ensure compliance to the principles enshrined in the Convention on the Rights
of the Child to provide the best protection to these children. I would like
to thank all of you who have come from various corners of our region with the
great intention to arrive at constructive and positive solutions toward the improvement
in the protection of refugee and displaced children. I would also like to thank
the UN agencies, namely, UNHCR and UNICEF and the Southeast Asia Foundation for
Institutional and Legal Development or SEAFILD for their continuing interest in
this subject and support to this regional consultation. I wish you all great success
in this very important deliberation. |