Transcript

[MUSIC PLAYING]

CHILD:
Did you know that every person in the world has human rights?
CHILD:
Even children have rights.
CHILD:
Human rights are the things that every person should have.
CHILD:
Or be able to do.
CHILD:
To live a good life.
CHILD:
With respect and security.
CHILD:
Every person in the whole world has these rights.
CHILD:
Because each of us is born equal.
CHILD:
In dignity and right.
CHILD:
Because children are young and sometimes weak.
CHILD:
They need special protection.
CHILD:
So that they can enjoy their human rights.
CHILD:
It is for this reason.
CHILD:
That children's human rights.
CHILD:
Have been written.
CHILD:
In a special document.
CHILD:
Called the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
CHILD:
Let's find out more.
NARRATOR:
So what are these human rights in the Convention on the Rights of the Child? Well, the right to life means every child's life should be protected. Children have the right to live in a clean and safe environment with proper care and supervision by their parents or other adults.
The right to education means that every child must receive quality instruction so that they're able to read, write, and count and develop their mental and physical abilities so they can reach their full potential as adults.
The right to food means that every child must have enough healthy food so they have strong and healthy bodies. The right to health means that children must be allowed to grow in a safe, clean environment so they can become healthy adults. They must be cared for when they're sick or injured. The right to water means children have the right to safe drinking water and a clean environment with proper toilet facilities.
The right to identity means every child must be officially recognised as a human being with human rights. It also means every child has the right to a name and nationality and to know who his or her relatives are. Children also have the right to have an opinion and to tell people their views in a respectful way.
They have the right to access information and to participate in decisions which affect their lives. The right to protection is the right to live in a secure and caring environment which keeps the child safe. Each child has the right to be protected from all forms of violence, physical, or mental abuse, exploitation, and slavery.
CHILD:
Human dignity is a fundamental principle.
CHILD:
Of human rights.
CHILD:
Which means that all people.
CHILD:
Without discrimination.
CHILD:
Deserve to be respected.
CHILD:
Because they're human beings.
CHILD:
It doesn't matter what age you are.
CHILD:
Or where you're from.
CHILD:
It doesn't matter what religion you are.
CHILD:
It doesn't matter if you're a boy or a girl.
CHILD:
All individual deserve respect.
CHILD:
And have the same rights.
CHILD:
So where do these rights come from?
NARRATOR:
Well, we are born with these rights because we are human. These rights are the things we must have so that we can live a healthy and peaceful life everywhere in the world. Our human rights were written down for the first time in 1945 in a document called the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Governments across the world realised that there was a need to give special attention to the rights of children. So in 1989, governments adopted the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, popularly known as CRC. This convention guides governments and all citizens young and old on what the human rights mean for children and what should be done so that children can enjoy these rights.
By signing the convention on the rights of the child, governments around the world promised all children these same rights. Governments have actually passed new laws to make sure people respect children's rights. But now everyone in society needs to help enforce and protect these rights from parents to educators and caregivers to children themselves.
So all children, big or small, living in a village or city anywhere in the world are special in many different ways. And you all have these rights.
Our rights are all connected to each other and are all equally important-- the right to live and grow, the right to eat enough healthy food, the right to drink clean water, the right to go to school, the right to learn many things, the right to receive care when you're sick, the right to be cared for by your parents or guardians, the right to have a name and belong to a country, the right to think for yourself, the right to share your ideas and be listened to, the right to practise your own religion, the right to be treated fairly by everyone, the right not to be enslaved, exploited, or do work that harms you, the right to play, the right to rest, and the right to have adults do what is best for you.
Let's see how you can use these rights in your life.