THE WORLD
From Issue #6
OH CANADA & BEYOND
Teen News From Across
The Country & The Globe
The Headlines
Canada
Poverty tops teen concerns
A sticky situation
Are you safe at work?
Doctors say Canada needs a Minister of Fitness
Anorexia study looks at long-term damage
International
Child Labour an ongoing problem
Teens must pay for bomb threat pranks
AIDS Activist dies at age 12
Mideast teens plant Seeds of Peace
Report of abuses at Samoan Camp
CANADIAN NEWS
Poverty
tops teen concerns
A
report commissioned by the Canadian federal government, in which
1,200 youths aged 7-18 were surveyed, found that addressing poverty
topped the list of their concerns.
The
definitions of poverty were broad, citing any barriers to eating
nutritious food, attending school, sleeping in a bed and having
clothes to wear.
"Some
of (the children) were recounting their own personal situations
of poverty, but they were also looking outside of themselves
and saying it's unacceptable that people are living on the street
and that children don't have enough to eat,'' said Alana Kapell,
who compiled the report for the non-profit organization Save
the Children Canada.
Other
big issues were abuse and violence, listed as the No. 1 concern
for 13.5 per cent of children surveyed, and drugs, alcohol or
smoking, listed as No. 1 by 12.2 per cent of respondents.
(Source:
The Canadian Press)
A
Sticky Situation
According
to Saskatchewan Valley director of education Michael McLeod, a
Saskatoon teacher put a strip of masking tape over the laps of
four students to teach fidgety kids to stay in their seats.
The
students were never confined says McLeod, the tape was just
a reminder to stay seated.
School
division officials believed the teacher's actions were inappropriate.
The teacher was punished with a disciplinary report, but did
not lose her job.
(Sources:
CBC Saskatchewan and CBC TV)
Are
You Safe at Work?
Canadian
labour groups say they're concerned about the number of young
people who are getting hurt or dying on the job.
Cathi Carr, who promotes a safety awareness program in Ontario,
says young workers are 50 percent more likely per hour to be injured
than an older worker.
Two
16-year-olds from St.Bernard, Quebec, died when the roof of a
barn they were working in collapsed. Stephen Mace had to have
his hand cut off after it was caught inside an industrial shredder.
She
says bosses often don't tell young workers about such risks and
the employees are often too afraid to speak up.
(Sources: CBC News Online and CBC TV)
Doctors
Call for Minister of Fitness
Dismayed
by Canada's obese youth, the British Columbia Medical Association
(BCMA) is proposing that the federal government restore a full-fledged
minister for sports and fitness.
A
study by the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada 13 years
ago showed two-thirds of children had the minimum level of physical
activity to remain healthy. Last year, that percentage fell
to one-third.
"We're
seeing the kids coming into their early teens 20 to 30 pounds
overweight. It's terrible, and it's happening right under our
eyes," Dr. Mackie, a BCMA executive said.
A
Cabinet minister devoted to sports and fitness could negotiate
greater federal funding, and would see the investment returned
in lower health care expenses, said Iona Campagnolo, the Lieutenant-Governor-elect
of British Columbia.
(Source:
National Post)
Anorexia
study looks at long-term damage
Whether
the brains of girls with acute anorexia nervosa are permanently
damaged is the subject of a study underway at the Hospital for
Sick Children in Toronto.
Dr.
Katzman, the chief researcher, and her team are studying 50 recovered
anorexics who were diagnosed during their teens.
Some researchers have written that starvation hampers hand-eye
co-ordination, as well as the ability to focus, speak and remember.
But when patients are nourished again, brain function returns
to normal.
Other researchers believe the problems are much longer-term, said
Dr. Katzman. She explained that when a person is acutely starved,
all the parts of their brain change structurally.Dr.
Katzman will focus on trying to map out how the structural change
affects a person's ability to think.
(Source: The Canadian Press)
INTERNATIONAL
Child
Labour an ongoing problem
Poor
economic conditions and severe poverty often force young kids
to work long hours for little or no pay.
Ivory
Coast, a West African county, has up to 15,000 children working
in the country's plantations because children are cheap labour
in a country where the poverty rate is as high as 40 per cent.
"If
they're not being paid, if they don't have access to school, if
they don't have the basic rights of a child to grow up, that's
exploitation," said Carol Jeanson, a co-ordinator for UNICEF.
Ladji, who is only 10, has been selling tissues for at least three
years. He makes less than $2 a day. "I have to work, to help
my mom," he says.
(Source: CBC News Online and CBC TV)
AIDS Activist dies at age 12
The
former South African president, Nelson Mandela, called Nkosi (En-KOSE-ee)
Johnson an, "icon of the struggle of life."
In
his short 12 years of life Nkosi was able to help change people's
attitudes towards HIV/AIDS in South Africa - a country, like
most others, where people often look down on those infected
with AIDS.
In
1997, Nkosi won a battle against policies keeping HIV-infected
children out of public schools. This led to a policy forbidding
schools from discriminating against HIV-positive children, and
to guidelines for how schools should treat infected students.
About
200 HIV-positive children are born in South Africa every day.
Most die before they reach school age.
A
foundation named after Nkosi will be established to raise money
to help AIDS orphans and infected mothers and their children.
(Sources: CBC News Online, Canadian Press)
Mideast
teens plant Seeds of Peace
Seeds
of Peace is a non-profit, international organization that promotes
understanding and co-existence among teenagers from regions of
conflict. Participants are encouraged to learn about each others'
cultures and religions in a neutral surrounding, in hopes they
can overcome obstacles they have grown up with.
The
program sponsors a Middle East delegation which includes Jewish
and Arab teenagers from Israel and the Palestinian territories
as well as young people from India, Pakistan, Greece, Turkey,
the Balkans, and other regions of conflict.
Dodi
Shulman, a participant from Israel says, "Seeds of Peace
has taught us that even if we disagree on things, we can still
understand each others opinions and point of view. And through
those perspectives we can help each other and support each other."
(Source:
CNN)
Teens must pay for bomb threat pranks
Two
teenagers, 15 and 16, from Virginia, USA, have been ordered to
cover the cost of their prank. They have been convicted of writing
a note warning a bomb would go off at their Amherst County High
School during the first lunch break.
Officials
estimate the school division spent more than US$9,000 in overtime
for teachers, who guided officers and police dogs, and administrators,
who worked the phones trying to keep parents and other officials
abreast of the situation.
"What
I'm hoping is that [suspects] realize they can get caught, and
if they do, they will be dealt with," said Gerald Higgenbotham,
an investigator with the Amherst County Sheriff's Office.
Should
the youths be unable to pay, the costs will be borne by their
parents.
(Source:
National Post news services)
Report
of abuses at Samoan Camp
Allegations
of sexual, physical and mental abuse have led to the removal of
23 teens, including one Canadian, from a rehabilitation centre
for troubled youths in Samoa.
Reports
made by the teens to the U.S. embassy in the capital of the
South Pacific island nation, "were very serious and were
coherent, credible and consistent," said James Derrick,
the chargÈ d'affaires at the embassy.
The
Samoa Observer reported the rehabilitation centre is owned by
Steve Cartisano, who was previously banned from operating teen-reform
survival camps in the US after a girl died while participating
in one of his programs.
(Source:
The Associated Press)