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Home Opinions Guest Writer

US envoy Deborah Malac decries sexual abuse in Ugandan schools

bySunrise reporter
June 18, 2016
in Guest Writer, Opinions
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US Ambassador Deborah Malac

US Ambassador Deborah Malac

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In commemoration of June 16, Day of the African Child, US Ambassador Deborah Malac has expressed her disappointment at the alarming levels of sexual violence that is being meted out against Children in Ugandan schools. 

In an Ope-Ed to The Sunrise, Ambassador Malac has highlighted how her government is investment significant amount of US dollars to try to stop violence against girls but also promote literacy. Below is the full text of Ambassador Malac’s statement.

The United States is proud to celebrate the Day of the African Child with our partners in Uganda and across Africa. Today (16th June), we commemorate the day in 1976 when thousands of school children in Soweto, South Africa, took to the streets to protest against the inferior quality of their education under apartheid.  Sadly, many children lost their lives that day, but their struggle for the right to an education has endured.

Forty years later, this June 16 is an opportunity to recognize progress in children’s basic rights in Uganda and raise awareness about the challenges children still face. All of us, as individuals or as policy makers, can agree that there is nothing more important for the future of a country than the education and wellbeing of its children.

Uganda’s theme for this year’s celebration is Protecting Children’s Rights, A Call to Action.The need to protect Uganda’s children has never been more urgent. In one study, 77 percent of primary school children reported having experienced sexual abuse at school. The Government of Uganda, in a 2016 report, has recognized sexual abuse as “the most common form of violence against children,”as well as “an urgent matter of national importance.”

The good news is that violence against children is beginning to be addressed both in and out of schools. In May 2014, the Government published Guidelines On Violence Against Children In Schools and currently works with multiple international donors, including the United States, to create safe schools across Uganda.

Working closely with the Government, the United States has committed $200 million over five years to programs in Uganda to promote literacy, reduce violence, and protect children’s rights. USAID’s reading programs support safe school efforts in 28 districts across the country. Just last month, USAID’s Literacy Achievement and Retention Activity trained 7000 school teachers from across Uganda  on how to reduce gender-based violence in schools and to provide a safe classroom environment.

The United States’ Determined, Resilient, Empowered, AIDS-free, Mentored, and Safe (DREAMS) initiative in Uganda engages multiple ministries and stakeholders to address gender-based violence and the high incidence of HIV/AIDS among adolescent girls. Anew four-ministry effort has been launched to develop a National Strategic Framework for Adolescent Girls Programming, which will address the disproportionate risk and vulnerability girls face as they enter adolescence.

Another encouraging development was the tremendous response from Ugandans and stakeholders to the National Forum on the State of the Ugandan Child held in Kampala at the end of October 2015.

Follow-up regional Forums held in Gulu, Mbale, Arua, Mbarara, and Fort Portal in January and February 2016 demonstrated that Ugandans nationwide are clearly saying that enough is enough and mobilizing to take action. As a result of the Forums, private sector companies, foundations, and non-governmental organizations have made specific commitments to expand education efforts throughout the country.

I have served in six different countries in Africa over the course of my career and visited many more.  As a diplomat and as a mother, one of my greatest joys is visiting schools, reading with and talking to students, and seeing the tremendous potential in those young lives.  All of Uganda’s children deserve the opportunity to realize their potential, free from the fear of violence.

As the United States Ambassador, I’m proud to say that the United States invests in excess of $450 million annually in education, health, and child protection in Uganda.  When it comes to violence against children, however, money alone cannot solve the problem; it requires a determined, coordinated effort at all levels-the Government, Founding Bodies of schools who still have major responsibilities under the Education Act of 2008, communities, parents, private sector companies, and private citizens.

The African proverb that it takes a village to raise a child is true now more than ever. It is also true that it will take a village to end violence against children. Each of us can and must do more to protect the futures of Uganda’s children, and we will. Join the movement to stop violence against children and become a champion for change to make Uganda a safe haven for all its children to thrive and achieve their potential. Let’s commit to work together to stop violence against children.

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