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No Spanking Day (Sri Lanka)



 
 
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Old May 10th 04, 08:27 PM
Chris
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Default No Spanking Day (Sri Lanka)


From the Daily News - Sri Lanka
http://www.dailynews.lk/2004/04/30/editorial.html


April 30th

No Spanking Day

Spare the rod and spoil the child, goes the popular saying. It implies
that a child cannot be brought up as a good citizen if he or she is not
punished for doing a wrong thing. Spanking of children by parents, family
members and teachers is common in societies all over the world.

Most of us have vivid memories of getting spanked at home and at school.
Fights among brothers and sisters inevitably resulted in more work for the
cane.

Some students considered getting caned an 'achievement', though admittedly
of a dubious kind. Bad eggs in the class were perennially at the receiving
end of the cane, even when they were not the culprits. The merest sight of
the cane was enough to frighten the more squeamish students.

In retrospect, caning is no laughing matter. It is a rather humiliating
and painful experience. In children's eyes, only capital punishment is
worse than corporal punishment. The physical scars of caning fade, but the
mental ones last a lifetime. After all these years, one can still recall
the tinge of pain and the sense of shame.

Spanking is now widely recognised as a child rights issue. Child rights
campaigners have designated April 30 as the 'World No Spanking (SpankOut)
Day' to highlight the need for doing away with corporal punishment.

A leading child rights organisation explains: "Children, like the rest of
us, have a right not be hit. Smacking hurts children - and not just
physically. The aim of a no-hitting day is to get parents to stop and to
think about it; to recognise that there are many positive and non-violent
ways to encourage the behaviour they want from their children; and to
realise they never need to hit a child again."

Several countries have enacted laws that prohibit violence against
children in any form. Sweden was the first to introduce such legislation.
Sri Lanka too has strengthened child rights laws, under which a person
found guilty of inflicting physical harm on a child can be sentenced for
up to 10 years in prison.

The Education Ministry Circular 2001/11 expressly forbids physical
punishment of children. The National Child Protection Authority and a
number of other organisations will be starting a heightened campaign
against corporal punishment from today.

This does not mean that parents and teachers should look away while the
children do as they please. As guardians, they must be vigilant about the
activities of children and guide them on the correct path through a gentle
approach. Discipline is essential in childhood, but choosing violent
methods to enforce and instill it is counter-productive. Childhood is an
age of innocence. Adults should help keep it that way.

 




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