IN JAMAICA: Nine new child ambassadors appointed....Lisa Hanna hailed the Child Ambassador programme as an excellent one...The 2014-2016 group consists of eight girls and one boy, ranging in age from 11 to 16 years who will serve for a period of two years.

Friday, June 13, 2014    
The Office of the Children's Registry (OCR) has appointed nine new Child Ambassadors who will help to raise awareness of issues surrounding child abuse and other matters affecting children across the island.
The 2014-2016 group consists of eight girls and one boy, ranging in age from 11 to 16 years who will serve for a period of two years.
Newly appointed Child Ambassadors pose with LIME
Corporate Communications Manager Elon Parkinson.
 (Front row left to right) Suzanna Hyde of St James,
Richard Bradshaw of St Mary, Diandra Dixon of
Kingston and St Andrew, Rueyella Blake of Manchester.
Back row (L-R) Nicole Raymond of Trelawny, Daniela
 Woodbine of Westmoreland, Kemoy Perry of St Catherine
 and Zoe Lawrence of St Thomas.
The ambassadors are: Diandra Dixon of Ardenne High School; Zoe Lawrence, Yallahs High; Richard Bradshaw, Carron Hall High; Nicole Raymond, Westwood High; Suzanna Hyde, Mount Alvernia Preparatory; Daniela Woodbine, Belmont Academy; Rueyella Blake, Manchester High; Kemoy Perry, Immaculate Conception High; and Kashielle Clarke of Glenmuir High.
Minister of Youth and Culture Lisa Hanna hailed the Child Ambassador programme as an excellent one as children are more likely to talk to their peers when they are being abused.
Hanna who was delivering the keynote address at the recent launch of the OCR's Child Ambassador's Awards Ceremony at Spanish Court Hotel in Kingston said 41 per cent of the cases of child abuse reported to the OCR is about neglect, followed closely at 37 per cent by reports of children in need of care and protection. She also explained that cases of sexual abuse are third on the list of reported abuse cases.
The minister congratulated the new ambassadors on their appointment and urged them to work closely with the OCR, the Child Development Agency (CDA) and the ministry to devise ways to get children to speak out about their experiences.
"You are going to have to say to them 'nothing is going to happen to you, you are protected; don't let anybody tell you that you should not speak out, because you will bring shame on your family, or they will pay you'," Hanna urged.
She advised the ambassadors that the position comes with responsibility and charged them to carry themselves in a manner that will make others want to speak to them.
"It is a position that comes with tremendous integrity and that integrity means that you will have to carry yourself in a particular way that people will trust you, and that you hold what they say to you in a manner that gives them confidence that you are there to protect them," Hanna said.
She reiterated that the ministry and related agencies are not leaving anything to chance, so they are focused and strategic in their activities to improve the lives of the nation's children. more

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