Coordinator of the Child Affairs Division in the Office of the Prime Minister, Irma Bailey-Reyes, says the Children’s Authority has received 10,000 reports of sexual abuse in eight years.
The statistics were given during the division’s first of three sensitisation and training sessions with councillors, aldermen, and other representatives at City Hall Port-of- Spain yesterday.
Bailey-Reyes said other statistics revealed the authority gets 4,000-5,000 reports of abuse annually, and the categories most experienced by children are neglect, sexual abuse, physical abuse and emotional abuse. She said the division fees this information was critical for local government representatives to have as they represent their burgesses for four years.
“We are all part of the village that is shaping that society for children. We have to ensure that whatever the programmes we are putting out there, it is meeting the needs and filling the gaps,” Bailey-Reyes said.
Bailey-Reyes told the LG representatives they have to promote child rights, as the division had found that 80 per cent of the public did not know children have rights in the 22 areas they have visited across the country.
“Just about 90 per cent does not acknowledge or have knowledge of a national child policy,” she explained.
She said the division has recently been asking the public about the rights of a child and while their responses were not shocking, Bailey-Reyes believes there must be change.
“Children ain’t have no rights, the only right they have is to listen to me...many of us believe that children really don’t have rights but at the Child Affairs (Division) we want to ensure that all of society do have rights and they should be respected,” she said as she noted how members of the public responded.
According to the division, the goal of the project is to equip councillors with the understanding of their work, including the programmes and services offered, in the hope that local government representatives will be able to better advise citizens about the services available.
The approximately 20 councillors and a few other LG representatives also learnt about the National AIDS Coordinating Committee (NACC), which is the country’s coordinating mechanism for HIV and AIDS.