Many of the
60,000 new New Zealanders each year deserve a better deal.
Numbers of them
are forced to live in difficult circumstances; they are unable to fend for
themselves, and no-one speaks up for them. Some are abused, others are
assaulted or otherwise degraded. All are potentially vulnerable and we need to
do better for them to avoid the opprobrium of the civilised world.
Already, the
hackles will be rising amongst the racists and the xenophobes, the Trumpists
and their acolytes in this country, who will be screaming in their ignorance
why are we allowing these people to add to the pressure points they perceive to
be already in our society, and why are we letting so many of them in every
year. However, this group of 60,000 new New Zealanders a year is not made up of
migrants or refugees, but is the number of children born in this country each
year. Nearly 70% of them will grow up in a two-parent family; just under 20%
will be raised in a sole parent household, and around 5% will have been born to
a teenage mother. None of them will have any choice or control of their family
circumstances, or how they will be raised subsequently, yet all of them will be
profoundly affected by that environment.
Amongst these
children are our future political, social services, academic and business
leaders, our future sporting heroes and sadly, our villains. But whatever their
destiny, they all have an arguably greater stake in the future of our country
than we who have been around for a while. As a group, children under 18 years
of age make up almost a quarter of our population. Yet few speak for them, and
even fewer try to reflect their needs in policy formation.
That is what
makes last week’s publication of a Children’s Covenant, under the guidance of
Judge Carolyn Henwood, and Ngai Tahu leader Sir Mark Solomon so much more
important. Their aim is as positive as it is stark – to “make a solemn and enduring covenant with
our nation’s children, whoever they are and wherever they may be, in equal
measure, those children who are born and those who are born in the future. We
as New Zealanders undertake an unconditional duty to do all in our power to
ensure that all our children are treasured, respected and enjoy a good life
full of opportunity in a nation that is diverse and rich in culture and aroha.”
Implicit in those goals is the recognition that every child has an equal right
to access to opportunity in this country, every child has an equal right to
access to quality healthcare and education, every child has a right to good
housing and good prospects in life, and that the challenge facing all of us –
and that is what the covenant
recognises—is to focus our efforts afresh on delivering those policies. It has
often been said, but not yet achieved, that we have to put the interests of our
children at the centre of government policies.
Against
that backdrop, Parliament resumed this week to the usual cacophony of windbag
rhetoric about housing and health, and all the hardy annuals, but amongst the shouting
and the handwringing, the state of our nation’s children received no mention.
Nor did the Children’s Covenant. Sadly, it seems, children are only of
political interest when there is another horrific assault or murder, and an
intemperate headline can be gained by strutting populists who can temporarily
stop attacking other minority groups, like migrants, as the root of all our
problems, to bang the law and order drum for a while. The cynicism is
putrifying and sickening, yet incredibly there are New Zealanders prepared to
lap it up.
Our children
simply deserve the best. We are failing them at present. The commitments
contained in the Children’s Covenant are positive steps credible and
responsible political leaders should willingly endorse, and seek to reflect in
their policy deliberations. Yet so far, only three parties – the Greens, the
Maori Party and UnitedFuture – have done so.
While the rest
lag behind, our children suffer. For a country built on compassion for the
vulnerable, that collective apathy is hardly something to be proud of
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