NCR amongst the organizations to receive funding from BeMed for 2022
In 2022, 13 new projects from 10 different countries aiming to protect the Mediterranean Sea from plastic pollution will be included in BeMed’s initiatives and will reinforce its efforts for a cleaner marine environment. One of these 13 projects will be undertaken by the Network for Children’s Rights, as a receiver of funding from BeMed under the name “A Healthy Life without Plastic is a Child’s Right”. The programme will attempt to raise the awareness of children on the matter through educational games about the fight against plastic pollution. NCR took part in the official presentation of the programmes on Friday 25/3 with Myrto Pispini, an associate of NCR.
The goal of NCR’s programme is for all children, of any age, ethnicity and cultural background to be given the chance to learn and take part in the fight against plastic pollution in and turn, inspire other children, their teachers, parents and communities to also take action. The children will gain practical experience through the activities and they will be guided so as to gain knowledge through their own experience, which is the most effective way to develop new skills and adopt new eco-friendly values.
Read [here] BedMed’s Press Release regarding the announcement of the fundings.
BeMed’s mission:
Due to high levels of human activity, the Mediterranean Sea has become a receiver of tens of kilos of waste daily, and as a result it is turning into a plastic waste trap for aquatic biodiversity, surpassing all previous records of plastic pollution. There are several projects aiming to reduce plastic pollution around the world and it is BeMed’s mission to support some of these initiatives in the Mediterranean. Through its annual invitation to micro-initiatives, BeMed encourages the exchange of knowledge and attempts to facilitate dialogue between authorities and individuals in order to create a protective net around the Mediterranean.
About Us
The Network for Children’s Rights acquired non-profit organisation status in 2004, but actually began as an informal action group four years earlier with the aim of raising awareness of problems relating to the righs of children and interceding in order to solve them. It encourages initiatives and actions to ensure that the UN International Convention on the Rights of the Child is implemented in Greece, to guarantee respect for diversity and to put an end to discrimination. Its members are teachers, parents, university lecturers, authors, artists and children who work on a voluntary basis both within and outside the school community. They carry out surveys, campaigns and programmes.
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