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Sicher-Stark-Team10-3kindermissbrauch
<< Bundespressestelle Sicher-Stark-Team 10-3"150.000 Kinder vor
Missbrauch geschützt!" >>
Hofpfad 11, D - 53879 Euskirchen;
www.sicher-stark-team.de;
presse@sicher-stark.com
Inhalt
Gewalt an Kindern ist ein uns alle immer wieder erschütterndes
Thema. Es ist daher notwendig, im Vorfeld etwas zu unternehmen, um
Kinder sicher und stark zu
machen, damit sie dieser nicht hilflos ausgeliefert sind und künftig
besser geschützt sind.
Gefahren drohen Kindern von vielen Seiten - in der eigenen Familie,
auf dem Schulweg, in der Nachbarschaft, auf dem Spielplatz und - wie
jüngst wieder in den Medien berichtet - sogar im Internet.
Die Sicher-Stark-Initiative hat es sich zur Aufgabe gemacht, Kindern
nicht nur ein besseres Selbstbewusstsein zu vermitteln, sondern
ihnen auch Wege aufzuzeigen,
wie sie sich in entsprechenden Situationen verhalten können und wo
sie Hilfe erfahren können.
In speziellen Sicher-Stark-Kursen und Vorträgen, die bundesweit an
den Grundschulen in Deutschland stattfinden, werden Kindern und
Eltern Tipps gegeben und
Verhaltensweisen aufgezeigt.
Im letzten Jahr wurden so über 150.000 Kinder mit Informationen zu
diesem wichtigen Thema geschult.
Die Gefahrenerkennung und Gefahrenvermeidung wird immer wichtiger.
Die Sicher-Stark-Initiative steht für eine der führenden
Non-Profit-Organisationen auf dem Gebiet der Gewaltprävention, für
moderne zielgerichtete Kommunikation und
hochkarätige Experten. In Deutschland ist das Sicher-Stark-Team
längst eine feste Größe, wenn es um anspruchsvolle Veranstaltungen
zu dem sensiblen Bereich
geht: Wie kann ich mein Kind vor Gewaltverbrechen und Missbrauch
schützen?
Oft werden gerade die Jüngsten in unserer Gesellschaft
vernachlässigt. Warum erst etwas unternehmen, wenn das Kind
sprichwörtlich in den Brunnen gefallen ist?
Vorsorge tut Not! Kinder wissen häufig nicht, wie sie sich gegen
Gewalt und sexuellen Missbrauch schützen können. Dies soll aufhören!
Die Initiative hat außerdem ein Hörbuch mit dem Titel "Achtung
starkes Kind" herausgebracht, das Eltern und Erziehern wertvolle
Tipps gibt, wie sie Kinder stark
machen können. Das Hörbuch ist über den Handel oder direkt über die
Sicher-Stark-Webseite (www.sicher-stark-team.de) erhältlich. Im Mai
wird außerdem ein Hörbuch
speziell für Kinder erscheinen.
Die Sicher-Stark-Initiative sucht weitere Spender, Förderer und
Sponsoren, welche die Präventionsarbeit finanziell unterstützen.
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Competition rewards environmental projects that save children’s
lives
Contacts:
sascha.gabizon@wecf.eu;
www.wecf.eu;
Diana@gsmith.com.fr;
www.env-health.org;
www.euro.who.int/parma2010;
www.env-health.org
;
www.wecf.eu;
www.euro.who.int/mediacentre/PR/2005/20050729_1
UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL 10.00 CET THURSDAY 11 MARCH 2010
HEAL & WECF
Parma, Italy 11 March 2010 – Eight winning projects have received
Children's Environment and Health Plan for Europe (CEHAPE) Awards at
the Fifth Ministerial Conference of the WHO European Region on
Environment and Health today. (1)
Each project represents "good practice" in improving the environment
for children's health(2), according to the leading international
non-governmental organisations responsible for managing the
competition. They are Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL), Women
in Europe for a Common Future (WECF), EcoForum, and International
Society of Doctors for the Environment Austria.
"Children's health in Europe is under threat," says Genon Jensen,
Executive Director, Health and Environment Alliance. "Rates of some
serious health conditions, such as cancer, are increasing year by
year and the traditional killers - respiratory and diarrhoeal
disease - are likely to be exacerbated by climate change.(3)
Endocrine disrupting chemicals - known as EDCs - are identified as a
key environment and health challenge(4) and as an area where
priority needs to be given to identifying safer alternatives(5)."
"Each winner in the CEHAPE Awards has shown how children's health
can be protected through low-cost, low technology interventions that
involve local people. We would like to see these projects copied as
widely as possible in communities in the European Union and across
the WHO Europe region."
Sascha Gabizon, Executive Director, Women in Europe for a Common
Future says: “Many of the countries in the European region invest
little money in measures to improve children’s health, which is
difficult to understand, given that children are our future. Damage
to health during childhood can have life-long negative effects."
"The CEHAPE awards show how local initiatives can be key to
improving children’s health, in particular in schools and
kindergartens. In 2010, each child should have access to safe water
and sanitation - Why is it that 13,000 children are still dying of
water borne diseases in our region?"(6) asks Ms Gabizon.
Other major problems for children's health are indoor air quality,
exposure to harmful chemicals and a lack of opportunity for physical
activity.(7) "Each child should be able to attend a school where he
or she is not exposed to asbestos dust or other indoor air
contaminants. Unfortunately, half the countries represented here in
Parma continue to build their schools using asbestos. Each child
should also be protected from harmful chemicals, in their toys,
clothes and living environments and be able to benefit from safe
physical activity and from green, natural areas. There is still a
long way to go, but the CEHAPE awards show that support for local
initiatives really pays off," Sascha Gabizon says.
The overall winner in each category of the CEHAPE Awards will
receive a cheque for 1,000 Euros. The eight award categories are
based on the four priority goals of CEHAPE (Water and sanitation;
Accident prevention and physical activity; Air quality; and
Hazardous chemicals and radiation); two key challenges for
children's health and the environment: mobility and climate change,
and two inspirational settings: youth participation and schools. (2)
…/…
THE WINNERS
Category 1: Water and Sanitation
Winner: Arūnas Balsevičius, Station of Nature Research and
Environmental Education, Lithuania.
Voluntary monitoring of drinking water wells by local citizens keeps
the water supply safe for children in Marijampolė County. In
Lithuania, more than one in four of the country's population relies
on drinking water from wells.
Category 2: Accident Prevention and Physical Activity
Winner: Katrina Phillips, Child Accident Prevention Trust, United
Kingdom
The organisers of Child Safety Week 2009 say 6.5 million people were
reached through mail-outs and participation in local events. A total
of 70,000 booklets containing simple ideas on how to improve child
safety were distributed and downloaded from the website.
Category 3: Air Quality
Winner: Sara Reekmans, The Flemish Institute for Health Promotion
and Disease Prevention, the Flemish Agency for Care and Health, and
the Flemish Local Health Networks, Belgium
This educational project helps provide fresh and healthy air for
classrooms in primary schools. It has been so successful that the
organisers are working on a request to extend the scheme to
secondary schools.
Category 4: Hazardous Chemicals and Radiation
Winner: Petr Sharov,Far Eastern Environmental Health Fund, Russia
By changing the contaminated soil in playgrounds, this project has
substantially reduced children's risks of lead exposure. The number
of children with lead in their blood above
internationally-recommended safety levels has been halved.
Category 5: Mobility
Winner: Franz Leeb, PORG Volders grammar school, Austria
School children are promoting public transport and cycling to school
as a way to reduce noise and air pollution around their school.
Coverage of the project in newspapers and on the radio has allowed
discussion of the high cost of travel on public transport.
Category 6: Climate Protection
Winner: Elena Manvelyan,Armenian Women for Health and Healthy
Environment, Armenia
A kindergarten in Armenia now has solar powered, low-cost, hot water
supply, thanks to this successful project. Some of the children's
parents are so impressed that they are having their own solar plants
installed at home.
Category 7: Youth Participation
Winner: Irina Fedorenko, Green Light Youth Organization, Russia
The organisers have provided young people with an inspiring
computer-based interactive environmental education and action
programme about the environment and health. An estimated 2,000 young
people have taken part in environmental measures associated with the
project.
Category 8: Schools
Winner: Umidjon Ulugov, Youth of the 21st Century, Tajikistan
This project creates "Green schools" with the help of student
environmental management programmes. Classrooms involved in the
project are warmer, tidier and boiled drinking water is available.
Student health has improved with fewer absences due to upset
stomachs and flu. Funds have been created by selling plastic and
waste paper to recycling companies.
The CEHAPE competition and award ceremony was sponsored by the
following Ministries and Agencies:
· Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, Environment and Water
Management - Division on Transport, Mobility, Human Settlement and
Noise, Austria
· Joint-Interministerial Conference on Environment and Health in
charge of NEHAP, Belgium
· Ministry of the Environment, Denmark
· Federal Environment Agency (Umweltbundesamt)
· Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and
Nuclear Safety, Germany
· Ministry of Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment, the
Netherlands
· Ministry of the Environment, Norway
· Ministry of Health and Care Services, Norway
· Ministry of the Environment, Sweden
Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL) and Women in Europe for a
Common Future (WECF) thank the European Commission for its financial
support.
Contacts:
Genon K. Jensen, Executive Director, Health & Environment Alliance,
E-mail: genon@env-health.org
Mobile: +32 4 72 445 968 Website:
www.env-health.org
Sascha Gabizon, Executive Director, Women in Europe for a Common
Future (WECF), Mobile: +49 172 863 7586. Email:
sascha.gabizon@wecf.eu
Website:
www.wecf.eu
Diana Smith, Communications, Health and Environment Alliance,
Mobile: +33 6 33 04 2943 E-mail:
Diana@gsmith.com.fr
Website:
www.env-health.org
Notes
Press conference: 10.00-10.30, the Media Centre, Auditorium Niccolo
Paganini, Parma Municipality Congress Centre, Viale Barilla 29/a,
43100 Parma. Website:
www.euro.who.int/parma2010 CEHAPE is
under discussion at the Fifth Ministerial Conference on Environment
and Health organised by the World Health Organization (WHO) European
Region in Parma, 10-12 March 2010.
A fuller description of each project is available in the brochure, "CEHAPE
Awards, Second competition on good practice in children's health and
the environment", which also features the work of HEAL and WECF on
children's health. It is available at
www.env-health.org or
www.wecf.eu
on 11 March 2010 after the
announcement of the winners.
Parma Declaration on Environment and Health , para 3.b – key
environment and health challenges of our time. Conference documents
not publicly available.
Parma Declaration on Environment and Health, para 3.e – one of the
key environment and health challenges identified by ministers are
“concerns raised by emerging issues such as persistent,
endocrine-disrupting and bio-accumulating harmful chemicals and [nano]”
(as above)
Commitment to Act, Chapter A, RPGIV, para iv (page 3) calls for more
research on endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) and safer
alternatives.
In the WHO European Region, this risk factor causes over 13,000
deaths from diarrhoea among children aged 0-14 years (5.3% of all
deaths in this age group) each year, WHO press release
www.euro.who.int/mediacentre/PR/2005/20050729_1
Commitment to Act, Protecting
children's health, Chapter A calls on countries to work toward
targets to improve access to safe water and sanitation, address
obesity and injuries through safe environments and providing healthy
indoor environments in child specific settings.
The Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL) aims to promote a healthy
environment for healthy people. It represents a diverse network of
more than 60 groups representing citizens, patients, women's groups,
health professionals, and environmental advocates across Europe.
Working at the European level, HEAL focuses on chemicals, pesticides,
climate change, air quality, mercury, children's vulnerabilities and
many other aspects of EU policy that are relevant to people's health
and the environment.
Women in Europe for a Common Future – WECF – is a network of over
100 women and environment organisations in over 40 countries,
created in 1994 following the 1992 Rio Earth Summit, to give women a
stronger voice in sustainable development and environmental policy,
with the aim of balancing environmental, health and economic
perspectives, WECF strives for a Healthy Environment for All. WECF
implements sustainable development projects at local level and
promotes policies for a healthy environment at global level.
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