NGO's Chiangrai
Children in Detention in Thailand
CHIANGRAI TIMES – The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child stipulates that the detention of children can only be used “as a measure of last resort” and “for the shortest appropriate period of time” and yet the children of migrant workers and asylum seekers are regularly held for long periods, sometimes for many years.
A new study conducted by the International Detention Coalition (IDC) has gathered testimonies from children held in immigration detention centres around the world (in 11 different countries). The organisation, an umbrella of more than 250 member groups, is now calling for an end to the practice.
The IDC estimates that hundreds of thousands of children belonging to refugee or migrant families are held every year worldwide. The duration of their detention can be lengthy, particularly in countries such as Thailand, which are not signatories of the 1951 Refugee Convention. Under Thailand’s immigration law, refugees and asylum-seekers who cannot return home or settle in third countries have to live inside state detention camps, regardless of their age. This often means that children are separated from parents of the opposite sex and live in over-crowded and unhygienic facilities such as Bangkok’s International Detention Centre. Here, schooling is only offered to the children two days each week.
Speaking to IRIN, the coordinator of the IDC’s campaign to end immigration detention of children said that holding children in centres “even for a short time, has a very toxic effect”. Research studies (quoted in the IDC report) have shown even short periods can be detrimental to a child’s development, though the longer children are detained, the worse the impact on their physical and psychological health. Periods of detention can cause anxiety problems, depression and even post-traumatic stress disorder in children.
In Thailand, the Thai Committee for Refugees Foundation (TCR) has been lobbying the country’s immigration bureau for two years in order to secure the release of asylum-seekers and refugees with children. Last year, the organisation had its first success when 96 Ahmadi refugees from Pakistan, including over 30 children, were released into outside accommodation paid for by the TCR.
It’s not unheard of for the children of migrants to be detained as long as five years in Thailand. TCR will therefore, no doubt, hope to capitalise on the new IDC campaign against child detention, launched this week at the 19th session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. Speaking to IRIN, the director of TCR spoke simply but movingly of the children who’ve been held inside the detention centres, describing the youngsters as “really desperate” to be free. -By, Laurinda Luffman for SOS Children
SOS Children’s Village Chiang Rai
Start operation for children since 2005 Address 236 Moo5 Tumbol Tah-Sood, Muang, Chiang Rai 57100 THAILAND Full capacity for caring 140 children
NGO's Chiangrai
Octordle Today: Daily #410 Hints And Answers For 10th March, 2023
(CTN NEWS) – You can find the answers to Octordle Today words #410 here, released on 10th March 2023, along with some hints.
Octordle requires players to guess eight five-letter words simultaneously while only having thirteen guesses! Wordle is similar in that there are no clues to assist you in guessing the words.
But once you have guessed a word, the tiles change color.
Colors indicate whether you correctly guessed the letters and their order. While there is no right or wrong way to play the game, we recommend trying to guess words that use most of the alphabet in as few guesses as possible.
It will help you identify which letters appear in each word so you can solve them quickly and efficiently. Make sure you keep in mind that some words may contain repeated letters.
Octordle Today #410 Words Hints (10th March, 2023)
Here are all the hints and clues you need to help you figure out Octordle Today’s answers for game #410.
Hint 1: There is a K in word 7 only.
Hint 2: There is a C in words 2 and 4.
Hint 3: There is an M in words 2 and 4.
Hint 4: There is a D in words 1 and 8.
Hint 5: There is a repeated letter in words 1, 2 and 6.
Hint 6: There is a double letters in words 3 and 5.
Hint 7: Here are the starting letters of each word:
- Word 1: A
- Word 2: M
- Word 3: B
- Word 4: C
- Word 5: L
- Word 6: T
- Word 7: S
- Word 8: P
Hint 8: Here is a little description or clue for all of the words:
- Word 1: give or order the giving of (something) as an official payment, compensation, or prize to (someone).
- Word 2: a slimy substance secreted by the mucous membranes and glands of animals for lubrication, protection, etc.
- Word 3: mad; insane.
- Word 4: a celestial object consisting of a nucleus of ice and dust and, when near the sun, a ‘tail’ of gas and dust particles pointing away from the sun.
- Word 5: not firmly or tightly fixed in place; detached or able to be detached.
- Word 6: a chiefly freshwater fish of the salmon family, found in both Eurasia and North America and highly valued for food and game.
- Word 7: a garment fastened around the waist and hanging down around the legs, worn typically by women and girls.
- Word 8: chequered or tartan twilled cloth, typically made of wool.
Octordle Today #410 Answer: What Is It Today?
If you don’t like the previous Octordle answers and you need to see the answers, we have you covered. Sometimes you have to do whatever it takes to keep the streak alive. Here, there are no judgments.
Don’t scroll further if you want to give the Octordle answer today a fair shot without spoiling it.
Here are the answers to Octordle Today #410 for 10th March 2023:
- Word 1: AWARD
- Word 2: MUCUS
- Word 3: BATTY
- Word 4: COMET
- Word 5: LOOSE
- Word 6: TROUT
- Word 7: SKIRT
- Word 8: PLAID
Is figuring out today’s answers easy, or are you scratching your head while guessing? Come back tomorrow for more Octordle clues and answers.
More In: OCTORDLE
NGO's Chiangrai
UNICEF’s Thai Children Donation Project: A Chance for Every Child in Thailand
UNICEF works in over 190 countries and territories to protect the rights of every child; they have spent 70 years working to improve the lives of children and their families. In Thailand, their Thai children donation project aims to provide every child with a fair chance to grow up in a safe, healthy and protective environment and reach their full potential.
UNICEF believes that all children have a right to survive, thrive and fulfill their potential – to the benefit of a better world. UNICEF’s mission is simple: The world has changed, but children’s needs have not. UNICEF works day-in-day-out in the world’s toughest places to reach the most vulnerable and disadvantaged children.
Why UNICEF?
Did you know that over 1.4 million children in Thailand still live in poverty? Since 1990, UNICEF has helped save more children’s lives (approx. 90 million) than any other humanitarian organization. UNICEF makes sure the world’s children are protected, fed, vaccinated and educated.
Not every child is born with equal opportunities. You can give hope to children, from newborns to teenagers, by donating to UNICEF and becoming part of the solution. UNICEF provides long-term aid that addresses immediate needs and creates lasting change for the better across three dedicated age groups:
Newborns – UNICEF works closely with the local government to promote more breastfeeding and prevent mothers from seeing harmful infant formula commercials.
Early childhood – To help children grow up with healthy development, UNICEF works closely with parents and caretakers to better understand early childhood education.
School-age –Around 14% of Thai children do not attend school. UNICEF strives to bring education to kids in rural areas through various grassroots projects and initiatives.
Early Childhood Development
UNICEF’s Thai children donation project is mainly focused on early (0-5 years) childhood development. Why? Because the first months and years of life are the most critical in a child’s development, it’s a time of significant brain, language, social, emotional, sensory and motor development. It is when the foundation for lifelong learning is established.
Unfortunately, many young children in Thailand lack appropriate care and stimulation. Many parents do not engage in learning activities with their offspring and have few or no books in the home. To help at-risk children receive the early learning experiences they need to reach their full potential, UNICEF is undertaking a range of targeted grassroots initiatives across Thailand, here are some examples:
SwimSafe program
Drowning is a leading cause of death in children in Thailand, with approximately 1,250 children under 15 drowning each year. UNICEF is working with the Ministry of Education and other partners to pilot the SwimSafe project at 20 schools in Thailand to help stop this preventable problem. To date, about 6,000 children have benefited from the first phase of the programme.
Mobile Library
More than 50% of children under five years old in Thailand live in a household with fewer than three children’s books. To provide such children with greater reading opportunities, UNICEF and its partners have established a mobile library. Under the project, over 15,000 students at 135 UNICEF-supported public schools in remote hill tribe communities are benefiting.
Demonstration centres
Across 24 provinces, UNICEF has organised quality experiences for pre-primary children and engaged carers through parenting programmes at designed demonstration centres. These free centres provide much-needed support, guidance and resources for parents, guardians, grandparents and caretakers who are time and cash poor.
To learn more about UNICEF’s invaluable Thai children donation project, please check their website.
Chiang Rai News
Canadian Couple Giving Hope to Kids in Chiang Rai
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CHIANG RAI -Canadian’s Brian and Karen Shaben never had kids of their own, but, by next week, they’ll have 24 to look after. “That’s just the ironic part, how do you go from zero kids to 24?” Brian said with a laugh.
The Canadian couple, founders of World Wide Life Humanitarian Partnership Society — a non-profit that partners with organizations to enhance living conditions for at-risk individuals in underdeveloped countries — will move to Thailand next week, having retired from full-time work in Canada to make careers of the humanitarian efforts they began in 2008.
They will start by partnering with Give Kids Hope Thailand, an organization that runs a children’s home in Mae Suai, Chiang Rai Province, home to 24 girls at risk of becoming involved in the sex trade in Thailand.
The Shaben’s will operate the home while helping in the development of a new training center that will emphasize vocational training and enhanced educational opportunities.
“It’s so rewarding for us,” Karen said.
“We think we’re going to help them and to bless them, but we’re actually the ones who get blessed — we really are.
“It’s amazing how wonderful these kids are and how creative they are and smart they are.
“The only difference between them and me is I was born here and I was given access to opportunities,” Karen said.
“Unless we do this, or people like us do this, they’re not given access to opportunity, especially some of the ones who live in these northern, remote areas.”
For the Shaben’s, the decision to move overseas and make full-time work of their humanitarian efforts has been a long time in the making.
Since their first hands-on experience nearly 10 years ago, the couple found their attention increasingly dominated by their work in Southeast Asia.
In October of 2014, they felt it their calling to move overseas and help — permanently.
“A lot of it came out of a bad situation I was in as a kid,” Brian said.
“I came from an abusive family background. My father was kind of abusive to the kids, very stern kind of guy.
“That kind of left an impression on me.”
The couple never had kids of their own, in part because of Brian’s upbringing.
“Earlier on, when we first got married, I wasn’t really wanting children because of my past — I wasn’t sure what kind of father I would be,” the 56-year-old said.
“I didn’t want to bring a child into the world if there was even a slim chance that my upbringing would make me a bad father.”
Brian’s youth, coupled with a horrific motorcycle accident in 1979 that stopped his heart and left him dead for minutes, made him feel there was a larger purpose to his life.
Despite never having kids of his own, his humanitarian efforts showed he had a knack for working with children.
“Brian’s living proof that you have a choice,” Karen, 49, said.
“He chooses not to be a victim.
“He has chosen to deal with the past, to get on with life and to take his experiences and make a difference for other people.”
The nature of the Shaben work will no doubt evolve during their time in Chiang Rai.
Brian said the country’s elderly and other orphanages may need help.
Regardless of what they end up doing, Brian and Karen will be making life better for those around them, which is all that matters.
“Making an impact on someone’s life in a positive way, when things look so bleak in the present, and then watching them develop and watching them come out of this thing called life on a positive note, knowing that you had a big part in that, it’s an exceptional feeling,” Brian said.
“You can leave this planet one day knowing that you’ve made a difference in the world — all the money in the world can’t buy you that.”
By Adam Williams
For more information on World Wide Life, go online to www.humanitarianpartnership.com
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