Two Malawian academics have produced a comprehensive report that looks at the role of NGOs in the education sector in Malawi. The report, titled 'The changing roles of non-governmental organisations in education in Malawi', is aimed at highlighting the role NGOs are currently playing in strengthening education and to assist donors and host governments in the design, use and management of NGO-implemented programmes.

Ethiopia is aiming to extend an education programme for millions of children to ensure it meets the United Nations Millennium Development Goals.

One of the many problems the present government faced when it seized power in 1994 was what to do with the thousands of children who were orphaned by war, genocide and now AIDS. Many of these children are not in orphanages, but roam the streets in one of the poorest countries in the world. Theophane Nikyema, the representative of the United Nations Children's Fund(UNICEF) in Rwanda, on 6 June gave IRIN his views on the situation of children in the country.

The UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) has called for the free registration of all children at birth, noting that millions of babies go undocumented each year, automatically denying them an official identity, nationality and status.

OVER 50% of children below 10 years of age have been sexually abused, the chairman of Uganda Child Rights NGO Network (UCRNN), Basil Kandyomunda, has said.

Warring leaders are destroying those who can ensure there is a new future for their countries and African leaders are not doing enough for the reconstruction of Africa, says Olara Otunnu, the United Nations special representative for children and armed conflict.

Almost a month after the special session, the final version of the much-awaited outcome document - A World Fit for Children - has been released.

Non formal schools in Ghana match education programme with the farming pattern and become a hit among rural children.

The United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child recommended on Friday that Guinea- Bissau and Niger strengthen efforts to combat female genital mutilation (FGM) and all other abuses against children, UNHCHR reported.

The new vice chancellor of the University of South Africa (Unisa) and former chairperson of the South African Human Rights Commission, Barney Pityana, who oversaw the hearings into racism in the media, has accused the "Mail and Guardian" newspaper of racism and is threatening to take it to court for defamation.

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