Friday, June 11, 2010

Corporal punishment at schools goes unchecked Incident at Hayatabad school released on YouTube

PESHAWAR: Pakistan has one of the highest school dropout rates in the world, thanks to corporal punishment. Beatings at school are considered culturally acceptable to ensure obedience, and legislation banning this practice is hence poorly implemented. The corporal punishment was observed not only in government schools but the well reputed private school teachers also practice beating students. The worst corporal punishment was reported in a well reputed boy’s school at Hayatabad area of provincial capital and a video clip of the said punishment was released on Internet You Tube in which a teacher was so badly beating a senior class student like slapping on his face, pulling his hairs and pushing him hardly to the class room wall. The clip invites the attention of different organizations working for the child rights to raise the issue and unveil the face of private school teacher. “The teacher needs to ensure obedience and ensure children receive proper guidance. For this, an occasional light beating or other physical admonishment is necessary,” Abdul Akbar, 40, who teaches at another boy's private school at Hayatabad, told The Frontier Post. According to reports, 35,000 high school students in country drop out of the education system each year due to corporal punishment. Such beatings at schools are also responsible for one of the highest dropout rates in the world, which stands at 50 percent during the first five years of education. It is said that culturally accepted form of child abuse also contributed to the high dropout rate among children and the fact that 70,000 street children were present in the country. The government of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa had banned corporal punishment in schools in 1999 and issued directives to all teachers not to use corporal punishment on children; violation would be followed with disciplinary. But, most children at schools across the country, both girls and boys, are beaten. "The law, as it exists now, permits parents or guardians, including teachers, to beat a child in "good intent". This prevented police from acting on complaints of physical abuse. It is also a matter of attitude. Teachers say they need to beat children to teach them, but there is a need to educate teachers and students about child rights. Every day children suffer physical and verbal abuse at their schools, homes and workplaces. Corporal punishment is often regarded as a culturally acceptable way of disciplining and changing the behaviour of children - however it leaves long term psychological and physical scars. In the wake of natural disasters, such as the 2005 earthquake, children are more vulnerable to this kind of abuse. Research in the earthquake affected area show that prior to the disaster 33 per cent of children reported being victims of corporal punishment. Following the disaster the figure has risen to 94 per cent. United Nations Assembly adopted the Declaration of the Rights of the Child (1959) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989). Article 19 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which Pakistan ratified in 1990, condemns all forms of physical and mental violence against the child including injury and abuse. In contradiction to this, Section 89 of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC, 1860) allows parents, teachers and other guardians to use corporal punishment as a means to discipline children under 12 years old. A participatory study in three districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa few years back, Peshawar, Hangu and Dera Ismail Khan revealed that corporal punishment is widely used to discipline children in homes and educational institutions. A total of 155 consultations were undertaken, using participatory research techniques, with 3,582 children aged 6-14 years from government and religious schools, 86 consultations with 1,231 parents, and 86 consultations with 486 teachers. Not one child reported never having received corporal punishment. Cumulatively, the children identified 28 types of punishment used in homes and 43 in schools. The most common punishments at home were hitting with an object (shoe, brick, iron rod, knife, etc), smacking, kicking, punching, hair-pulling and ear-twisting. The most common in schools were smacking, hitting with an object, hair-pulling, ear-twisting, and awkward and humiliating physical positions. About 43% of all punishments identified were reported by children in government primary schools, about 30% in government middle schools, 10% in government high schools, and 16% in private schools. Corporal punishment in schools was most commonly inflicted by the teacher and students assigned discipline duties in the school (49.6%), including class monitor, commander, and assembly commander. Senior students were also frequently reported to be hitting younger children (14.7%). The Bill on Corporal Punishment Bill already draft and submit Child Protection Bill to Parliament for approval, to be finalized soon, would also help extend protection to the child rights in the country.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

there should b a law in pakistan tht teachers should go to jail if they hit or punish a student.. like we have here in canada.. this doesnt help at all... this will make da student cranky n stubborn.... tht teacher hit tht student many times n still she didnt stop... how cruel....