Liberian Peace
Nobel Prize winner Leymah Gbowee, presents Abraham Keita
the International
Children's Peace Prize 2015, for his efforts to improve
children's
rights in his country, in The Hague
|
A vibrant Liberian teenager was Monday awarded the
prestigious International Children’s Peace Prize for his “tireless campaigning”
to end violence against minors.
Seventeen-year-old Abraham Keita was handed the award by his
countrywoman, Leymah Gbowee, who in 2011 was awarded a Nobel Peace Prize
together with Liberia’s President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.
“Keita’s tireless work as a campaigner, bringing attention to
crimes against children and campaigning until the perpetrators are locked away,
stood out and convinced the jury,” the competition organisers KidsRights said.
“This award is a symbol of hope for the children in my
community, in my country and around the world,” Keita told AFP.
In Liberia children are “victims of civil war, of poverty,
corruption and violence,” Keita said.
“If you give justice to children, you are giving it to the
world.”
Liberia is still struggling to get back on its feet after 14
years of civil war, which ended in 2003 leaving some 250,000 people dead.
The teenager has lobbied the Liberian parliament to adopt
laws to protect children, and led marches and demonstrations to highlight the
issue. Some 80% of the population lives below the poverty level in Liberia, which
was also hit this year by the deadly outbreak of Ebola in west Africa.
In a country where 60% of the population is under the age of
25, almost 4,500 children lost one or both parents in the outbreak in which
some 5,000 people died.
According to a report by the University of Leiden, in the
west of the Netherlands, almost half of Liberia’s children have experienced
some kind of physical violence and 13% of girls have been sexually abused.
“When I was nine, a young 13-year-old girl in my area was
raped and killed by her foster parents, and I said to myself, that could have
been my sister, or cousin or even me,” Keita said.
The International Children’s Peace Prize has been awarded
annually since 2005 to a child who “fights courageously for children’s rights.”
“Every year, the message of the new young winner has enormous
impact and demonstrates to millions of people globally that change is
possible,” the KidsRights Foundation added.
The foundation also invests some 100,000 euros ($108,000) in
projects in the winner’s country.
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