Clear Path International helps fund Dr. Cynthia Maung's work along the Thai -Burma (Myanmar) Border.
FOCUS ON REFUGEE CHILDREN, CHILD WORKERS AND ABUSED CHILDREN
This year's three finalists for the World's Children's Prize for the Rights of the Child (WCPRC), with prize money totalling SEK 1 million (USD 140,000) are :
� CYNTHIA MAUNG, Burma, who has fought for the health and education of hundreds of thousands of refugee children for 20 years, both under the military dictatorship in Burma and in refugee camps in Thailand.
� INDERJIT KHURANA, India, who has run over a hundred schools and two phone help lines for 21 years, helping the poorest, most vulnerable children who live and work on station platforms.
� BETTY MAKONI, Zimbabwe. After being abused as a child, Betty began to fight to give girls the courage to demand their rights. She supports those who are exposed to abuse and protects others from assault, forced marriage, trafficking and sexual abuse.
WORLD'S LARGEST EDUCATIONAL INITIATIVE ON DEMOCRACY AND CHILDREN'S RIGHTS
The WCPRC empowers children and young people all over the world so that they can make their voices heard and demand respect for their rights in accordance with the UN Child Convention. The WCPRC has quickly grown into the world's largest annual educational initiative for children on rights and democracy. As part of this process, the children award the world's most respected prizes for outstanding contributions to the rights of the child.
11 million students at 20,000 schools in 82 countries participate in the WCPRC, and that number is growing constantly. Around five million of those children will participate in a Global Vote to determine who will receive the Global Friends' Award 2007. An international child jury � consisting of children who are experts on the rights of the child through their own experiences as soldiers, refugees, street children or slaves in brothels or on farms � chooses the recipient of the other major award, the World's Children's Prize.
Over 300 organisations all over the world support the WCPRC, which also collaborates with many Departments of Education and youth media projects worldwide. The prize magazine, like the website, www.childrensworld.org , is available in nine languages and is read by over 7 million young people.
MANDELA IS A PATRON
The patrons of the WCPRC include Queen Silvia of Sweden , Nelson Mandela, President Xanana Gusm�of East Timor , former Executive Director of Unicef Carol Bellamy, former UN Under-Secretary-General Olara Otunnu, and Nobel Prize Winner in Economics Joseph Stiglitz.
The prize money, SEK 1 million (USD 140,000), is to be used in the recipients' work for the rights of the child and will help some of the world's most vulnerable children. It is supported by AstraZeneca, Banco Fonder and pi.se. The WCPRC was founded by the Swedish organisation Children's World, and is a Swedish National Millennium Project.
This year's prize ceremony will be held on 16 April at Gripsholm Castle in Mariefred, where HM Queen Silvia will help the children to give out the prizes. All three final candidates will be honoured. The recipients of the prizes will be announced at a press conference at 12 noon on 13 April, at S� Teatern, Mosebacke Torg, Stockholm , Sweden .
For more information on the WCPRC and the prize candidates see:
PRESS at www.childrensworld.org, where you can also find high-res pictures and video material.
Contact: Magnus Bergmar, +46(0)159-129 00, +46(0)70-515 58 39 magnus.bergmar@childrensworld.org
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