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Uganda is marking 35 years since the adoption of the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (ACRWC) with renewed calls for stronger funding, enforcement, and co-ordination to protect children amid concerns that the country is still falling short of its international obligations.
This comes as child rights actors, government agencies and children themselves convened in Kampala city for a Civil Society Organisation (CSO) symposium aimed at strengthening accountability for child protection commitments.
The three-day event held at Silver Springs Bugolobi, organised by the Uganda Child Rights NGO Network (UCRNN) and supported by several development partners, is part of nationwide commemorations of the Charter, adopted on July 11, 1990.
Kyegegwa District Woman MP Flavia Kabahenda warned that Uganda is still behind on its obligation to dedicate at least 10 per cent of the national budget to children a requirement under global child rights frameworks.
“International children’s rights obligations require that we allocate 10 per cent of the national budget to children. It is Uganda that is lagging in enforcing this,” Kabahenda said.
“If we properly consolidated all child-focused interventions across sectors, we could even exceed that 10 per cent. But our interventions are scattered and unco-ordinated.”
Kabahenda said that despite Uganda’s robust legal framework, including the amended Children’s Act, the National Social Protection Policy, and national parenting guidelines, implementation remains weak. Many laws, she said, lack corresponding penalties in the Penal Code, making enforcement difficult.
“We have good laws, but enforcement is where we lack,” she said.
“Police officers frequently say there is no penalty for certain offences, and violations go unpunished.”
Right To Play country director, Titus Tumusiime, raised an alarm over the increasing number of street children from Karamoja trafficked into Kampala and, in some cases, as far as Nairobi.
“Can we help the children of Karamoja? Can we help the children of Uganda?” he asked. “Let us ensure that whoever is engaged in child trafficking is apprehended and the law takes its course.”
The three-day CSO symposium was held under the theme: Reflect, renew, recommit is supported by the European Union, United Nations, the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Save the Children, World Vision, FIDA Uganda, Right to Play, ERIKS, Africhild, Terre des Hommes, and others brought together more than 200 participants, including ministries of Finance, Gender, Internal Affairs, KCCA, and the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions.
As Uganda commemorates 35 years since the adoption of the ACRWC, the message from stakeholders remains clear: the country boasts strong laws, but must match them with funding, enforcement, coordination, and political will.
The closing call was unanimous, children’s rights can no longer be celebrated only on paper. They must be lived realities in homes, schools, communities, and every arm of government.