24-February-2012
Next Generation Nepal Names Martin Punaks as Our New Nepal Country Director
Feb 24, 2012 – Next Generation Nepal is excited to announce the appointment of our new Nepal Country Director, Martin Punaks! Martin brings with him more than 12 years of experience working in the field of children’s rights, with a strong focus in South Asia.
Originally hailing from the U.K., Martin served as the Head of Resource Mobilization for Bachpan Bachao Andolan, India’s largest child rights and anti-trafficking organization, in New Delhi. He’s also served as the Director of Advocacy and Partnerships for Backward Society Education in Kathmandu. Both of these grassroots organizations work to combat child trafficking into the labor force and address the issue at its root causes. In addition, Martin spent three years with Charities Evaluation Services in London, where he advised not-for-profit organizations on good management practices. He also remains one of the authors of PQASSO, the U.K.’s leading not-for-profit management tool.
Martin has an MA with Distinction in the Anthropology of Development from the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, and he has had a close relationship with South Asia since his youth, having volunteered with Nepali, Tibetan and Punjabi communities in India and Pakistan and Bangladeshi communities in the UK.
From his academic, work, and volunteer experience, Martin has developed not only an extensive knowledge base of child trafficking in South Asia, but is personally dedicated to the issue of children’s rights. We could not be happier that he will be continuing his passionate work in this field as a member of our team.
We welcome Martin to the NGN family!
About Next Generation Nepal
Next Generation Nepal is a nonprofit organization dedicated to reconnecting trafficked children with their families. Founded in 2006 by Conor Grennan and Farid Ait-Mansour, NGN has linked trafficked children in its care to their home communities in post-conflict Nepal through a careful process of reconnection and reunification. With offices in New York City and Kathmandu, NGN oversees a small program staff implementing an ambitious strategic plan for growth and maximum impact. The founding of NGN is chronicled in the current international bestseller from HarperCollins, “Little Princes: One Man’s Promise to Bring Home the Lost Children of Nepal” by NGN founder Conor Grennan.
For more information, visit: www.nextgenerationnepal.org or Facebook.
Media Information
Contact: Conor Grennan
Email: info@nextgenerationnepal.org
Website: http://nextgenerationnepal.org
Address: 527 Third Ave., Suite 196, New York, NY, 10016
21-March-2011
Twenty Children Rescued from Illegal Orphanage in Nepal Are Now in Next Generation Nepal’s Care
20 children who had been beaten and starved while living in squalid and unhealthy conditions at an illegal orphanage in Mukti, Nepal, are under the care of Next Generation Nepal, a nonprofit that reconnects trafficked children with their families.
PRLog (Press Release) – Mar 21, 2011 – Twenty children who had been beaten and starved while living in squalid and unhealthy conditions at an illegal orphanage in Mukti, Nepal, are now under the care of Next Generation Nepal (http://www.nextgenerationnepal.org) (NGN), a nonprofit that reconnects trafficked children with their families.
An orphanage volunteer alerted staff at Terre des Hommes International Federation, a Swiss nonprofit devoted to disadvantaged children, and Save the Children about the condition of the children. These organizations in turn alerted government authorities.
The transfer of the children was supervised by Nepal’s Central Child Welfare Board and the District Child Welfare Board—two agencies charged with child protection.
Fourteen of the children are girls and six are boys. The youngest is a 5-year-old boy and the oldest is a 15-year-old girl. The children were moved to NGN’s Karnali Home 1 in Kathmandu, one of two transitional homes for trafficked children operated by NGN. Karnali Home 2 is located in Humla, the remote district in far Western Nepal where most of the trafficked children in NGN’s care originate.
“The children are in a really bad shape,” says NGN Country Director Julien Lovera. “Most of them said they were happy to leave the orphanage even before they knew where they were going. A few asked me if they would continue to be beaten, whether they would still go hungry and whether they would be allowed to play football. We are trying our best to help them adjust.”
The orphanage volunteer whose concern and action led to the rescue has visited the children at NGN’s Karnali Home 1.
“It was a huge help for the kids to see her,” says Lovera. “I allowed her to stay with them for the night and for a few more days, if she wishes. She’s a great source of information about the children’s backgrounds.”
The current residents of Karnali Home 1—eight adolescents under NGN’s guardianship who were also victims of trafficking— have lent an enthusiastic helping hand.
“Our kids have been just wonderful,” says Lovera. “They’ve been so caring, trying to make a difficult adjustment as smooth as possible. I am so proud of them.”
The children from the orphanage will remain in Karnali Home 1 as NGN begins the process of determining if the children have families, locating them, reconnecting them and stabilizing their futures.
“NGN is grateful to be able to play a part in the rescue of these children and provide them with the basic rights that every child deserves,” says NGN Executive Director Hallie Tamez. “This is who we are and what we do.”
Still, she adds, there are thousands of other children enduring similarly horrific situations at this very moment. NGN relies on individual donations to continue rescuing these children and reuniting them with their families.
About Next Generation Nepal
Next Generation Nepal is a nonprofit organization dedicated to reconnecting trafficked children with their families. Founded in 2006 by Conor Grennan and Farid Ait- Mansour, NGN has linked trafficked children in its care to their home communities in post-conflict Nepal through a careful process of reconnection and reunification. With offices in New York City and Kathmandu, NGN oversees a small program staff implementing an ambitious strategic plan for growth and maximum impact. The founding of NGN is chronicled in the current international bestseller from HarperCollins, “Little Princes: One Man’s Promise to Bring Home the Lost Children of Nepal” by NGN founder Conor Grennan.
For more information, visit: www.nextgenerationnepal.org or Facebook.
Media Information
Contact: Conor Grennan
Email: info@nextgenerationnepal.org
Website: http://nextgenerationnepal.org
Address: 527 Third Ave., Suite 196, New York, NY, 10016
10-March-2010
Innovative Program Returns 20 Trafficked Children Home to Their Families in Nepal
Thousands of children taken from Nepal’s rural villages by traffickers end up on the streets of Kathmandu. Through the efforts of Next Generation Nepal, a small nonprofit group, trafficked children are reconnected with their families and reunited with their communities.
Online PR News –10-March 2010– Thanks to the reunification efforts of Next Generation Nepal (NGN), this April twenty children who had been taken from their families by child traffickers during the civil conflict and abandoned in Kathmandu will finally return to their families and home communities.
For the past five years, NGN and its partner organizations combating child trafficking have been caring for the children in Kathmandu, where they were first found. Now, Next Generation Nepal’s programs have expanded beyond merely caring for the children, and are successfully returning children to their families in rural Nepal when village and family assessments deem it advisable. This action is in accordance with the UN position on The Principle of Family Unity (2004) which states that: “All children have a right to a family, and families have a right to care for their children."
Next Generation Nepal has secured a spacious house in Simikot, in the far western region of Humla, which will serve as a transitional home for the children as the process of reconnection continues. Under the guidance and care of NGN, the children will attend school, participate in rural community life, visit regularly with family and learn the customs and traditions of their birth. “This is an enormous and historic undertaking. Moving these children from Kathmandu to their home district reflects the underlying belief of NGN: that each child has the right to be raised in their own family,” states Hallie Tamez, Executive Director for NGN.
The crisis of trafficked children in Nepal begins when traffickers deceive village families with offers to bring their children to the faraway capital of Kathmandu, where they will be given an education. Poor village families pay enormous sums for this supposed privilege. However, instead of being given an education the children are put up for illegal international adoptions, forced into slave labor, or simply abandoned on the streets. The children are often as young as three or four years old.
NGN has developed an innovative three-step approach to restoring families torn apart during the armed conflict. First, NGN Search Teams locate families of trafficked children through an intense search of remote mountainous areas, most of which are accessible only by foot. The team then reconnects them with letters, photos and visits. Finally, if conditions are deemed safe and appropriate, NGN reunites children with their home communities and families permanently. In this way, the children inherit the traditions of their society and rural villages have a chance to survive and thrive in the future.
NGN believes a future free from trafficking lies in respecting and supporting the traditions and potential in rural communities. NGN will continue to tackle the root causes of trafficking through sustainable community development programs in cooperation with local and international partners to ensure the future of education and life skills to children in rural Nepal.
Returning these 20 children home in 2010 represents a significant achievement for NGN in its mission to reconnect trafficked and displaced children with their families.
About the Organization:
Next Generation Nepal is a small non-profit organization working to reconnect trafficked children with their families. Founded in 2006 by Conor Grennan and Farid Ait- Mansour, and developed in collaboration with Conor’s wife, Elizabeth Grennan, NGN has linked trafficked children in their care to their home communities in post-conflict Nepal through a careful process of reconnection and reunification. With offices in both New York City and Kathmandu, NGN oversees a small program staff implementing an ambitious strategic plan for growth and maximum impact.
For more information, visit: www.nextgenerationnepal.org or Facebook.
Media Information
Contact: Conor Grennan
Email: info@nextgenerationnepal.org
Website: http://nextgenerationnepal.org
Address: 527 Third Ave., Suite 196, New York, NY, 10016 |