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Die zehn wichtigsten Kinderrechte

                                                                                                                                                           

 

 
In 1979 in the United States of America, a group of smiling girls embrace.  The girls, dressed in traditional costumes of their homelands, are standing outside the United Nations International School in New York City.

1. Das Recht auf Gleichbehandlung und Schutz vor Diskriminierung unabhängig von Rasse, Religion, Herkommen und Geschlecht.

 
A schoolboy holds up a placard with his name, Harold, spelt in Arabic during a class at the UNICEF-supported Beni Ouriaghel Primary School in the city of Tangier, capital of the north-western Tangier-Tétouan Region.

2. Das Recht auf einen Namen und eine Staatszugehörigkeit

 
A health worker vaccinates an infant at Redemption Hospital in New Kru Town, a neighbourhood of Monrovia, the capital. UNICEF supports the hospital's breastfeeding, growth monitoring and immunization programmes, and provides staff training, medical equipment and essential drugs and supplies. 
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3. Das Recht auf Gesundheit

 
Bolivien: Kinder in der Schule

4. Das Recht auf Bildung und Ausbildung

 
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5. Das Recht auf Freizeit, Spiel und Erholung

 
Kate Boyle and Alana Joseph, 10-year-old girls from a New York City primary school, read a 'Go Girls!' pledge medallion that they can sign, supporting education for all, during the 'Girls' Education: The Biggest Lesson Ever' event at UNHQ.

6. Das Recht, sich zu informieren, sich mitzuteilen, gehört zu werden und sich zu versammeln

 
Three girls smile while playing with a hula hoop at an adolescent-friendly space at Beitfourik Village, east of the city of Nablus.

7. Das Recht auf eine Privatsphäre und eine Erziehung im Sinne der Gleichberechtigung und des Friedens



 
On 7 February, children walk arm-in-arm at a temporary camp where 18,000 people who have been displaced by the post-election violence have sought refuge, in the town of Eldoret, in Rift Valley Province.

8. Das Recht auf sofortige Hilfe bei Katastrophen und Notlagen und auf Schutz vor Grausamkeit, Vernachlässigung, Ausnutzung und Verfolgung

 
The embroidered edge of her dress in his mouth, a boy holds his mother's hand as he stands in front of her in the village of Bhaluka, Mymensingh district.

9. Das Recht auf eine Familie, elterliche Fürsorge und ein sicheres Zuhause

 
Monica Muñoz and Luis Alberto Pinilla Rojas, both 14, sit together at poolside during a weekend retreat for disabled children, run by the NGO CIREC (the Colombian Integral Rehabilitation Centre), outside Bogotá, the capital. Monica, from the department of Cauca, lost one foot when her younger cousin brought a grenade home, not knowing its danger. It exploded, killing the cousin and injuring both Monica and her brother Jonathan, both of whom required lower leg amputations. Luis Alberto, from the department of Putamayo, left home at 11 and was rescued from the streets. He says he was born without one foot, but social workers suspect it was amputated following a war-related injury.

10. Das Recht auf Betreuung bei Behinderung