Evicted from Home, Unaccommodated in the Street: The Castigatory Experience of Skolombo Boys and Lakasera Girls of Calabar in the Light of UNCRC

B. M. Ajiboye
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Abstract

The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC; for every child, every right), adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1989 and fully operationalised in 1990, firmly protects the rights of every child under the age of 18 years anywhere on the planet. The UNCRC clearly states that every child has the right to know and be cared for by his or her parents. An international treaty signed by 196 countries, bar the United States, since adoption is the most broadly endorsed children’s rights treaty in history and has helped transform children’s lives around the world. But despite provisions in favour of children’s rights well-articulated in the treaty, poignantly, not every child gets to enjoy the rights stated therein. In Nigeria, so many children are cut short of these rights, even though the nation is an avid signatory to the UNCRC treaty. As an analytical context, a number of teenagers (male and female) numbering more than 1000 living in the major streets of Calabar, Cross River State, Nigeria, conspicuously referred to as Skolombo boys and Lakasera girls of Calabar, are not only rejected, abandoned and sent away by their parents, but are also discriminated against by the entire city on account of false suspicions of wizardry and witchcraft, a modish form of child rights violations and a clear recalcitrant to the UNCRC treaty. It is startling that limited studies have addressed this problem that most fundamentally affects these children. Relying considerably on both primary and secondary data, this article examines the plights of these children, who are left to fend for themselves within a nation that signed on the dotted lines for the child’s right to protection and concurrently allowed them to be treated with ultra-condemnation. The article concludes that without concerted efforts geared to address child rights violations in the form of persistent rejection and discrimination, the cruel experience will eventually force them to strike and become more dangerous than society can handle.
被逐出家门,流落街头:从《联合国儿童权利公约》看卡拉巴尔 Skolombo 男童和 Lakasera 女童的受难经历
联合国大会于 1989 年通过并于 1990 年全面实施的《联合国儿童权利公约》(UNCRC;"每个儿童,每项权利")坚决保护地球上任何地方 18 岁以下儿童的权利。联合国儿童权利公约》明确规定,每个儿童都有权了解自己的父母并得到父母的照顾。这是一项由 196 个国家(包括美国)签署的国际条约,自通过以来已成为历史上得到最广泛支持的儿童权利条约,并帮助改变了世界各地儿童的生活。然而,尽管该条约详细阐述了有利于儿童权利的条款,但令人痛心的是,并非每个儿童都能享受到其中规定的权利。在尼日利亚,尽管该国积极签署了《联合国儿童权利公约》,但仍有许多儿童无法享有这些权利。作为分析背景,生活在尼日利亚克罗斯河州卡拉巴尔主要街道上的 1000 多名青少年(男性和女性),即卡拉巴尔的 Skolombo 男孩和 Lakasera 女孩,不仅被父母拒绝、遗弃和送走,而且还受到整个城市的歧视,因为他们被错误地怀疑是巫师和巫婆,这是一种侵犯儿童权利的卑劣形式,显然是对《联合国儿童权利公约》条约的蔑视。令人吃惊的是,针对这一对这些儿童产生最根本影响的问题的研究十分有限。这篇文章在很大程度上依赖于第一手和第二手数据,研究了这些儿童的困境,他们在一个签署了保护儿童权利虚线的国家里自生自灭,同时又允许他们受到极端的谴责。文章的结论是,如果不采取协调一致的努力来解决持续排斥和歧视形式的侵犯儿童权利问题,残酷的经历最终将迫使他们罢工,并变得比社会所能承受的更加危险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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