Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Kehkashan Basu, UAE-based Indian Teen, Wins Children's Peace Prize

IANS, 05 Dec, 2016 01:05 PM
    An Indian schoolgirl based in UAE has won this year's International Children's Peace Prize for her fight to save the planet.
     
    Kehkashan Basu, a 16-year-old schoolgirl, was presented the award by Nobel Peace laureate Mohammad Yunus at a ceremony held in The Hague on Friday, Gulf News reported.
     
    At the age of eight, Basu organised an awareness-raising campaign for the recycling of waste in her Dubai neighbourhood.
     
    In 2012, she founded her own organisation, Green Hope, which carries out environment-focused campaigns. Basu went on to become the youngest ever Global Coordinator for the Major Group for Children and Youth of the UN Environmental Programme.
     
    Basu has addressed various international conferences and her organisation Green Hope was now active in ten countries with more than 1,000 young volunteers. 
     
    "It is a great achievement for such a young person to already have such reach and impact with her important message," said Yunus. 
     
    "Kehkashan teaches us that we all have a responsibility to work towards a sustainable future," he added.
     
    The schoolgirl won because she had proved her ability to start a movement with real impact, said Marc Dullaert, the founder of the KidsRights Foundation. The Amsterdam-based global children's aid group runs the award programme, which started in 2005.
     
    After receiving the prize, Basu said she would "keep campaigning to encourage children and adults to create a more sustainable future". Basu currently divides her time between the UAE and Canada, where she has moved to study.
     
    "I call upon everyone to think of how they can contribute to the preservation of the environment... Time is not on our side - we have to act now, or we will have polar bears under palm trees," she said.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    B.C. Funds Expansion Of Network Providing Mental Illness Support To Families

    VANCOUVER — British Columbia is providing $3 million in funding for specialized support to people living with serious mental illness and their families.

    B.C. Funds Expansion Of Network Providing Mental Illness Support To Families

    Firefighters From United States, South Africa To Join Fort McMurray Fire Fight

    Firefighters From United States, South Africa To Join Fort McMurray Fire Fight
    Senior wildlife manager Chad Morrison says the blaze continues to move northeast away from communities and oilsands facilities in northern Alberta.

    Firefighters From United States, South Africa To Join Fort McMurray Fire Fight

    Mother Lets Son, 11, Drive Golf Cart At Resort, Gets Jailed And Charged For Child Abuse

    Mother Lets Son, 11, Drive Golf Cart At Resort, Gets Jailed And Charged For Child Abuse
    Julie Mall tells The Charlotte Observer her son asked to drive the cart two blocks back to their rented cottage on Bald Head Island on July 26

    Mother Lets Son, 11, Drive Golf Cart At Resort, Gets Jailed And Charged For Child Abuse

    Hearing For Alleged Peace Bond Violations By Internet Black Widow Sets New Date

    Hearing For Alleged Peace Bond Violations By Internet Black Widow Sets New Date
    Police have alleged 80-year-old Melissa Ann Shepard broke the conditions of her peace bond in April after an officer on his beat happened to recognize her in the Halifax Central Library and observed her using a computer.

    Hearing For Alleged Peace Bond Violations By Internet Black Widow Sets New Date

    Indian Students Win Six Awards At Intel Competition In USA

    Indian Students Win Six Awards At Intel Competition In USA
    Indian students have won six awards at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) in the US where New Delhi's Shreyas Kapur was declared the grand winner of the "Google Thinking Big Award."

    Indian Students Win Six Awards At Intel Competition In USA

    Best Of Your Sex Life Begins At 40: Canadian Study

    Far from resulting in loss of libido, reaching 40 could actually make your sex life more adventurous, says a study.

    Best Of Your Sex Life Begins At 40: Canadian Study