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Posts Tagged ‘SPPU’

The Salvation Army’s latest State of the Nation report, was launched yesterday and points to serious, embedded and ongoing hardship.

Over the past year the covid-19 pandemic has plagued our world and cast a large shadow over us all, especially affecting families up and down the country who were already struggling. Inequality, already entrenched in Aotearoa (New Zealand), was magnified and exacerbated by the impact of Covid-19.

The 14th annual State of the Nation 2021 report from The Salvation Army, “Disturbed Present. Better Future?” points to serious, embedded and ongoing hardship for an increasing amount of people in our communities, many of whom have never sought assistance from The Salvation Army before.

The State of the Nation 2021 report provides a snapshot of what hardship looks like for the people and whānau who came through our doors over the last year.

Last year was a year full of disturbances, disruptions, and dramatic change. “The Government’s measures to respond to the Covid-19 crisis have been significant and helped greatly to lessen impacts. However, this year’s report shows that the poorest and most vulnerable in our nation have suffered the most from these serious disturbances from Covid-19, leaving many with a gloomy future” says Lt-Colonel Ian Hutson, Salvation Army Social Policy and Parliamentary Unit Director.

The report is available here.

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In 1995 at the World Conference on Women in Beijing, countries unanimously adopted the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action – the most progressive blueprint ever for advancing the rights of not only women but also girls. 

Furthermore in 2011 the United Nations General Assembly adopted Resolution 66/170 to declare October 11 as the International Day of the Girl Child, highlighting the unique challenges they face around the world.

The International Day of the Girl focuses attention not only on the need to highlight and address these challenges, but also to promote girls’ empowerment and the fulfilment of their human rights.

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) adopted by world leaders in 2015, embody a roadmap for progress that is sustainable and leaves no one behind. (I have previously posted about the SDGs here and how we are promoting this locally).

In New Zealand the International Day of the Girl is a reminder that not every Kiwi child gets the childhood they deserve. Shakti, a refuge for ethnic women in New Zealand, is promoting the day to highlight the veiled childhoods of some of our girls.  

Shockingly, up to 50 per cent of Shakti’s crisis work is with girls forced into underage marriages. ‘It’s surprisingly prevalent in migrant communities,’ says Shakti spokesperson Polly Peña, who recently helped set up a safe house in Wellington.

Chris Frazer, social justice advocate for the Salvation Army’s Social Policy and Parliamentary Unit (SPPU) says that ‘overwhelmingly, extreme poverty and deprivation continues to wear a female face.’ She is working with Shakti to promote the International Day of the Girl. ‘We are all made in God’s image. And girls – as well as boys – deserve the chance to grow and thrive in the knowledge they are loved, respected and valued,’ she says.

 

Sunday 11 October provides ‘each one of us the opportunity to read, reflect, pray and above all, to act to bring violence, harmful judgment and indifference to an end.’

Check out the following links:

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20140804SPPUElectionSeriesAhead of New Zealand’s General Election on 20 September 2014, The Salvation Army’s Social Policy for Parliamentary Unit has prepared a six-episode video series to help voters be informed about key issues facing the country.

 

These videos won’t tell anyone how to vote, but they will raise awareness around – housing, our children, social hazards, crime and punishment, and work and incomes. We hope this series encourages people to be active citizens who take their opportunity to vote seriously.

Click here for more information.

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