AMWCY

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Launch of the cartoon film “Tounga : it must change !”

Launch of the cartoon film “Tounga: it must change!”

MAEJT: launch of the cartoon film “Tounga: it must change!” 

The launch of the cartoon film “Tounga: it must change!” of the AMWCY took place on 24 November 2021. The film translates the ECOWAS strategic framework on child protection into a child-friendly version. The launch was part of the International Day of the Rights of the Child that took place in Dakar, and specifically at the ECOWAS Gender Development Center. It was marked by a face-to-face participation of some GRPE member organizations including the SOS children’s villages, Plan International, Enda TM and the virtual participation of the 28 member countries of the AMWCY, mainly represented by children. All of them highly appreciated the film which will serve as an awareness and advocacy tool for the respect of the rights of the child. Produced by the AMWCY with the support of Enda Jeunesse Action, and the financial support of Save the Children, the communication tool is one of the results of the joint Regional Protection Group (GRPE) -ECOWAS plan. The film, the 4th of its kind in the “Tounga” series, exposes the issues facing children: child marriages, child labor, birth certificate, child mobility, abuse and violence, exploitation, and so on. It is also a call to action for state authorities and protection actors to build a better world for children.

Below the film link on YouTube

French:  https://youtu.be/HkrULE4iCEg

English: https://youtu.be/d4AyZ7mS5hs

 

 

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Children find their own solutions to change their lives

Friends in need: the children's support network helping migrants in west Africa

Last autumn, Aimé Bada and James Boyon, Training Officer at Enda Tiers Monde and Child Protection Officer at the AMWCY respectively, gave an interview to Child to Child to discuss the African Movement of Working Children and Youth (AMWCY). AMWCY is an organisation led by working children and young people that gives them the opportunity to find solutions to their problems and change their lives.

In 1994 a group of children and young people from four African countries decided to establish the African Movement of Working Children and Youth (AMWCY) in the Ivory Coast. The premise underpinning AMWCY is that children from diverse backgrounds and countries will often share the same goals and life prospects. The organisation expanded rapidly and today can be found in 27 countries across Africa. Yet it hasn’t lost its child-led focus and mode of operation; children represent 73% of members.

Through AMWCY children come together to discuss the problems they face in their communities and reflect on possible solutions. Recognised as experts in their reality, children and young people are the ones who find the solutions, who advise and guide the other children.

It is not unusual for minors in the region to move around unaccompanied. They can be sent to stay with family members to study, for instance, or may get a job away from home to provide their household with an extra income. In the worst cases they are fleeing wars, abuse or violence at home, including early marriages. But young people have other reasons to move too, which may involve aspirations for the future and a desire to discover the world.

Where did the idea come from to create this organisation?

In the beginning the children themselves created the group – we are talking of working children, whether domestic workers, mechanics, shoe shiners, children in masonry workshops, or those who helped work at home. They looked at their situation and decided to take charge of their destiny. By identifying their rights, they could truly exercise them and think about how to improve their living conditions.

Then the organisation grew, and the original children grew up! They are now able to help other children who join the organisation and give them advice.

What is the level of children’s participation in the organisation?

The children themselves lead the activities. The organisation is only there to support them, to give them technical advice and support so that they can successfully implement their solutions, ones that work for them in their working lives.

In fact the children have appropriated the spaces that adults offered, to defend their rights. They literally took ownership! Thus the Board of Directors consists of seven members, five children and two young people, who are assisted by a facilitator.

Have adults experienced difficulties working in this participatory way with the children?

No, it is not difficult for adults. Our approach is to support what is being done, so that children can do things by themselves.

However it has been difficult for the governments to recognise child labourers and the organisations that represent them, because of the stipulations set out by international conventions and the International Labour Organisation (ILO) which typically mandate against child labour in any circumstances. In some cases the organisations have had to do a lot of advocacy about this, and the children have had to clearly explain their approach before being accepted.

Can you give us examples of projects implemented by children?

Depending on their needs children work on the 12 rights that frame the organisation’s work, rights to: read and write; express oneself; taught a trade; play and leisure; health care; be listened to; rest when sick; work in safety; be respected and afforded dignity; stay in the village; light and limited work; and to equitable justice. For example they recently conducted activities to raise awareness about – and advocate against – exploitation and child marriage.

Now the organisations also run training activities and engage in a range of advocacy and communications to raise awareness. One favourite approach is to produce cartoons on a range of issues, for example, migration and the mobility of children, on how to take into account the risks and dangers, and on child marriage. The three cartoons were broadcast on television in some countries.

Often the main focus of activities is the right to learn to read and write. For socio-economic reasons the children we work with must work to survive, which means they don’t have access to education since school is generally open when children are at work. So the children have to choose: either they go to school where they won’t really understand very much because they are not able to attend regularly or they engage in work to put food on the table and have a future. But children know the importance of writing, reading and counting, so they have developed connections with schools that offer them rooms in the evening, where they set up “literacy spaces”, often with a monitor to support their learning. This means that child domestic workers, for example, can attend these schools in the evening where they can learn to read and write and also meet other children of a similar age.

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Friends in need: the children’s support network helping migrants in west Africa

Friends in need: the children's support network helping migrants in west Africa

A grassroots volunteer group is helping child migrants in west Africa, by treating them as friends rather than inferiors

Across west and central Africa, groups of adolescents have created a network to support young migrants travelling alone. Treating them like friends, they offer advice, shelter and opportunities for training.

It is not unusual for minors in the region to move around unaccompanied. They can be sent to stay with family members to study, for instance, or may get a job away from home to provide their household with an extra income. In the worst cases they are fleeing wars, abuse or violence at home, including early marriages. But young people have other reasons to move too, which may involve aspirations for the future and a desire to discover the world.

The decision to depart home is usually made between the ages of 14 and 18. Bus rides, long walks and lifts on motorbikes are seen as part of an adventure before realising that with the journey comes isolation, a struggle for food, no place to sleep and exposure to exploitation.

Mariko Fatoumata, a 16-year-old from Mali, has met many children on the move in the bustling market facing her mother’s restaurant in the outskirts of Bamako. She is one of more than 30 youth volunteers with the grassroots organisation African Movement of Working Children and Youth (AMWCY)’s child migration programme who meet at the restaurant every week.

“It is a good place to keep an eye on children passing by,” she says. “If they seem to need help, we approach them. Sometimes we offer meals to those who cannot buy food. Each of us has committed to sponsor a migrant child, taking them home to sleep and walking with them into the city the next day.”

Across the region, the movement has established listening centres, where children can go to talk and receive guidance. Word of mouth helps spread information about the group, as does Facebook, radio programmes, cartoons, flyers and newsletters. Volunteers also run awareness sessions in villages where teenagers are likely to leave from.

Other initiatives are more formal. Starting in Benin and now covering 10 countries, the association has set up mobile phone networks to keep contact with young migrants from the village of departure to destination. In Niger, the movement’s membership card is known by the police as an identification document. This is helpful in areas where children without papers are easy prey for traffickers.

Another component of the work is vocational training to help children learn a profession or start a small business. “Once we were called by the police to help with a child who had gotten in trouble,” Fatoumata says. “He was a porter at the station and had a fight with another child about who should carry a bag. He had left his village, but he just really wanted to be his own boss. So we helped him buy chickens that he could raise back at home. Later, he started an AMWCY group in his own community.”

Most young volunteers taking leadership roles in the organisation have direct experience as beneficiaries of the service. James Suru Boyon, in Nigeria, joined the association 10 years ago when he was 16. His father died a few years earlier and he wanted to study and to help his mother. Like many others, he was thinking of leaving home to find a job in the city, but a friend introduced him to the movement. With their help, he stayed at home, got an income selling sewing material and studied engineering. Together, they also created a group to help other children in the village. This is how the movement keeps growing.

Funded through membership fees and contributions from UN agencies and humanitarian bodies, the organisation now counts more than 830,000 supporters in 27 countries. Over 270,000 are active members, 73% are below 18 and 57% are girls. They say it would be difficult to travel 200km in west Africa without meeting someone from the association.

According to the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), in 2009 about 8.4 million people were mobile in west and central Africa, representing “the largest total migrant stock in Africa”. Most stay in the region. “Sub-regional migrations have always occurred and are a fundamental part of the local economy,” explains IOM migrant assistance specialist Michele Bombassei. This mobility involves “hundreds of thousands of children” but international agencies struggle to collect figures, as there are no mechanisms to monitor informal movements.

Humanitarian organisations have seen that preventing children from migrating, or sending them back home once they have, is not effective. “If I escape from a difficult situation and you take me back without a solution, I will obviously try to escape again,” says Boyon.