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Wada Na Todo Abhiyan Holiding the Government Accountable to its Promises
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Member of Planning Commission Receives the 300,001st Nine-Is-Mine Petition , 13th November 2007
Planning Commission Member Receives 300,001st ‘Nine Is Mine’ Petition
On Children’s Day eve, young ‘Nine is Mine’ campaigners hosted a press conference to launch the second phase of their signature campaign, which will exhort the Finance Minister, P Chidambaram to ensure that 9% of the GDP is invested in health and education, in Union Budget 08-09 as promised in the National Common Programme. November is the month when the Union government begins its budget exercise.
In the previous budget year, 200,000 children across 12 states came together through the ‘Nine Is Mine’ effort to petition the Prime Minister to fulfill this promise, following which a delegation of children met Dr. Manmohan Singh on 1 February 2007. We believe that this effort has contributed to highlighting the need to prioritize public expenditure for health and education in the policy dialogue as well as the public debate.
Laxmi Gudillu, 12, signed the 300,001st signature on a giant replica of the signature postcard and gave it to Planning Commission Member Prof. Abhijit Sen for delivering to the Finance Minister. Dr. Sen also released `Ensuring Universal Access to Health and Education in India’, a Status Report on health and education by Wada Na Todo Abhiyan (Keep your Promises Campaign), a national-level coalition of over 3000 civil society organisations and networks across 23 states that has been coordinating the children’s ‘Nine is Mine’ initiative.
“I cannot give you a figure for the next Union Budget, but there is going to be a substantial expansion on investment in health and education during the 11th Five Year Plan,” said Prof Sen. “Our great failure has been on both these accounts. Enabling and empowering people through education and on the health side, addressing this as a fundamental right.”
Laxmi Gudillu, who lives in the Sanjay Nagar slum in Jogeshwari, Mumbai, spoke of her meeting with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh earlier this year, when the children presented him with the 200,001st signature on 1 February 2007. “We were happy to hear that the budget for education and health was increased after our meeting, but there is much more to be done” she said. The youngest of five siblings, Laxmi attends the local municipal school and her educational expenses are borne by a local youth organization because her older brother, with whom she lives, is struggling to make ends meet.
Supporting this effort, Prof. Imrana Qadeer who has authored the health section of the Ensuring Universal Access Report said, “The WHO calls for an allocation of 7.5 per cent of the GDP for health. India today allocates only 1% of its GDP to Health while Bangladesh, Nepal, Thailand, Brazil and South Africa have already reached levels over 3 per cent of the GDP, and western countries allocate 6 per cent and above to their health sectors.”
Amitabh Behar, Convenor of the ‘Wada Na Todo Abhiyan,’ said that 500,000 children across India were expected to petition the Finance Minister before the Budget Session in February 2008. “Health and education must not be seen as isolated expenditures, but as part of the overall investment in the nation’s development. Every child in India should have free access to health and education. It is the least the government can do to secure the future of the country,” he said.
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Wada Na Todo is Affiliated to Global Call To Action Against Poverty Millennium Campaign
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Wada Na Todo: Holding the Government Accountable to its Promises of Ending Poverty and Social Exclusion