Vulnerable, Underprivileged Children: Cameroon, UNICEF Offer Videography, Photography Skills

A three-day training holding in Mbalmayo near Yaounde is jointly facilitated with the PENASED Non-governmental Organisation.

The Ministry of Communication, the United Nations Children’s Fund, UNICEF, the Ministry of Social Affairs, MINAS and the charity, Pentecostal Advocates for Socio-economic Development, PENASED, on May 17, 2021 began a videography and photography workshop for 20 vulnerable and underprivileged children. The participants aged 10-24 are from Lekie, Mfoundi and Nyong and So’o Divisions in the Centre Region.

Why The Training, Now?

Despite the putting in place by Cameroon of a legal framework to protect children, especially by ratifying almost all international legal instruments, formal and community systems for child protection remain wanting. Thus, the protection accorded children victims of abuse, violence, exploitation and the vulnerable, remain insufficient, uncoordinated and lacking. Compared to their specific needs. 

It is for this reason that the training from May 17-19, 2021 is holding in Mbalmayo on the outskirts of Yaounde. Sponsored by UNICEF, it is jointly facilitated by officials of the Ministry of Communication and PENASED. The workshop is the second in the Centre Region after a first one from late March to early April 2021 in Yaounde. Similar workshops have held in the East, North, Far North and Littoral Regions. Thus this pilot project covers five of Cameroon’s 10 administrative regions.

Government’s Willingness

Opening the workshop, Aristide Manga Assiga, the Nyong and So’o Divisional Delegate for Communication, urged participants to take advantage and come out of a life of pity and vulnerability; promising government’s willingness to continue to protect vulnerable and underprivileged children in the country. “The workshop is meant to help vulnerable children to discover the career options open to them in videography and photography. Pictures are so important because they tell stories and can earn money for their authors,” Manga Assiga justified.

Set For Employment Challenges

He said children do not have to wait until they grow up before thinking of what to do in life. “The earlier vulnerable and underprivileged children are trained, the better they will be in facing life’s challenges, especially employment,” Assiga noted. Wambia Denise, Nyong and So’o Divisional Delegate for Social Affairs, expressed hope that the training will enable the children to earn a living even in later life. Or during holidays “because parents cannot afford all of their children’s needs.”

Perceived Discriminated

“Vulnerable and underprivileged children often think they are discriminated against. The training offers them the opportunity to socialise, given that they are psychologically affected and easily believe that they do not have what others own,” Wambia Denise explained.

“It is better to train someone to fish than offer them fish,” Watto Joseph, PENASED Executive Coordinator, stressed. He explained that most of the children were not expected to become professional photographers and videographers now. But by developing early interest, they could build on such careers later in life.

Opportunity To Earn Decent Living

Ngomassongo Alice, 13, a physically-challenged Form Two Home Economics student of Government Technical High School, Mbalmayo, said she was interested in the training because it will enable her to do videos and take pictures. “...

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