Indonesia, UNICEF and the European Union mark 20 years of the Convention on the Rights of the Child
JAKARTA, 20 November, 2009 — Representatives of the Government of Indonesia, UNICEF and the EU gathered in Jakarta Friday to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child – the most universally ratified human rights treaty in history. H.E. Linda Gumelar, State Minister for Women's Empowerment and Child Protection, H.E. Ewa Polano, Ambassador of Sweden and holder of the EU Presidency, H.E. Julian Wilson, Head of the Delegation of the European Commission and Ms Angela Kearney, UNICEF Representative in Indonesia, spoke of collective efforts to advance the rights of Indonesian children in line with the Convention. Professor Irwanto, PhD, Chair of the Institute for Research and Community Services at Atma Jaya University made a special presentation on children's rights in Indonesia. The event also provided the occasion for the release of two new publications focusing on child rights - a special edition of UNICEF's "State of the World's Children" report, which reviews progress for children over the last two decades, and the Bahasa Indonesia version of the global EU Guidelines on the protection and promotion of children's rights, which commit the EU to intensifying its action in this field in international The CRC is the most widely accepted human rights Convention in the world, with 192 States Parties have ratified the Convention since 1989. Indonesia H.E. Linda Gumelar stated at the event: "The Government of the Republic of Indonesia has a strong commitment to advance children's rights. At the Meanwhile, H.E. Ewa Polano said: "The rights of the child are an absolute value whose realisation, more than just a worthy goal in itself, makes a H.E. Julian Wilson remarked: "All of us – government, international agencies, NGOs, media, families – have a duty and responsibility to work
Ms Angela Kearney stated: "We have watched the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child move from birth, through childhood to adolescence and now Contacts:
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