
Upholding The Rights And Well-Being of Children In South Africa
By Dadjie Saintus
Reflections from a recent visit to South Africa, where UNICEF works to safeguard the lives and futures of children.
Young children play outside at Risiha Program Safe Park in Johannesburg, South Africa.
© UNICEF South Africa February 2025
I recently traveled with UNICEF USA partners on a program visit to South Africa. With 45 percent of the population under age 24, South Africa is a land of rich diversity, dynamic growth and complex challenges.
While classified as upper-middle-income, the country grapples with deep-seated inequality rooted in its apartheid history. Today, 6 in 10 children are trapped in long-term poverty, a rate that is much higher in rural parts of the country (88 percent) compared to urban areas (44 percent).
Within this context, we saw firsthand how UNICEF delivers on its promise to uphold the rights and well-being of children through critical areas including child protection, maternal and child health and safe water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services.
We explored UNICEF-supported Safe Parks, which serve as child-friendly spaces where young people living in high-risk communities can access nutritious meals, mental health and psychosocial support, life skills training and other services.
An adolescent at Risiha Program Safe Park tutors a student after school.
© UNICEF South Africa February 2025
At the Risiha program in Johannesburg, we went on a tour led by adolescents who had established the Youth Forum. They knew the facilities well, having visited the park regularly since they were little. Now, these adolescents serve as mentors to the younger kids coming to the park.
In our conversations, the Youth Forum leaders shared aspirations as varied as their personalities — becoming a software engineer, a musician, a doctor, a teacher. Although they faced many obstacles, including poverty and violence in their neighborhoods, the Risiha program-supported Safe Park provided a haven where they could dream of what's possible.
UNICEF also protects children at risk by investing in parenting programs through community-based organizations like Mfesane and Beautiful Gate in Cape Town. In meetings at both organizations, we met social workers who aimed to strengthen the capacities of caregivers to create nurturing homes.
The social workers explained how they take a case management approach — caregivers are equipped with positive parenting skills while families participate in group and individual counseling sessions. I joined one of the adolescent groups where some of the youth affirmed that since participating in the sessions, they have been communicating better with their parents at home.
At Mfesane, UNICEF USA visitors join a meeting with local leaders before playing with youth at a Safe Park.
© UNICEF South Africa February 2025
For the social workers working with families through trauma, joblessness, health problems or other crises, burnout was a real concern. But, as they find ways to deal with the demands of their work, one social worker shared that seeing progress in the way parents and children relate to each other keeps her going.
Across the country, UNICEF works with the government and community partners to reduce maternal and infant mortality rates and set children up for a better start in life.
In Johannesburg, I saw this work in action at the Maria Rantho Clinic, which seeks to improve maternal and child health and nutrition as well as reduce HIV transmission. Supported by UNICEF for many years, the clinic became so effective that it was transitioned to and is now funded by the national government.
Health workers and administrators from the Maria Rantho Clinic in Johannesburg welcome visitors from UNICEF USA.
© UNICEF South Africa February 2025
Its work is all the more critical given that South Africa has one of the highest HIV burdens in the world. Yet, in our meetings, the health workers revealed how they have kept mother-to-child HIV transmission rates consistently at 0 percent.
Alongside the medical care provided, one factor contributing to these results is a peer mentor program that trains young mothers aged 15-25 who have received care at the clinic. As peer mentors, these mothers provide health education and psychosocial support services, including sexual and reproductive health, to empower other pregnant adolescent girls and young mothers.
These relationships are a lifeline. One mother told us that when she had experienced depression during her pregnancy, her peer mentor connected her to the services and provided the emotional support she needed to deliver her baby safely. She continues to attend sessions today with her peer mentor, bringing along her son, who remains healthy at age 2.
In rural areas like the flood-prone provinces of KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape, communities lack access to safe water, hygiene, and sanitation (WASH). In these regions, UNICEF crosses the last mile to develop WASH infrastructure and climate-adaptive solutions.
At a junior school, UNICEF introduces interventions to enhance WASH infrastructure and build climate resilience.
© UNICEF South Africa February 2025
In Mthatha and East London, we toured two junior schools where UNICEF is working with partners to deliver safe water and sanitation while introducing innovations like low-pressure toilets to conserve water and promote sustainability.
In talking with school officials on our visit, Irfan Akhtar, UNICEF South Africa's Deputy Representative and Chief of Programs, proposed creating a locally-led water management committee. Based on a model that worked well in similar contexts, UNICEF staff would train committee members to operate the water system so they could maintain it over the long term.
Support from donors and partners is what makes UNICEF's impact in South Africa and around the world possible. It is what allows UNICEF to scale what works and reach millions of children and adolescents with essential services.
Threaded across the programs we experienced were interactions with collaborating organizations, community leaders and ministry officials. In these meetings, Irfan Akthar listened as local leaders discussed barriers and best practices to serving families and children, chiming in to offer effective interventions he has observed or relevant UNICEF data. He also identified opportunities to incorporate their feedback in UNICEF's conversations with governments and multilateral institutions at global forums. In this way, UNICEF advocates for governments to adopt a child-centric approach in their policies, plans and budgets.
This strategy has resulted in many achievements across South Africa, including:
These are just some examples of how, through multi-sector partnerships and strategic advocacy, UNICEF is helping to make children a priority at all levels of government, thus ensuring that governments invest in more and better services that benefit them.
Whether in the townships of the inner cities, settlements near the coast or in rural villages, with the help of valued donors and partners, UNICEF won't stop working on the front lines to safeguard the lives and futures of children in South Africa and around the world.
Learn more about UNICEF programs for children in South Africa
Help UNICEF reach more children in need. Please donate today.
Dadjie Saintus is a Senior Director of Philanthropy for UNICEF USA
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Psychiatrist Professor Renata Schoeman explains the ripple effects: Excessive screen time links to depression, anxiety, poor sleep, declining academic performance, social withdrawal, and exposure to harmful content like cyberbullying or eating disorder promotion. Physical consequences include obesity, eye strain, and poor posture. Parents' confessions: Holding a mirror to our habits Before reading SASOP's findings, I started to think about what my phone usage looks like to my four-year-old after she chastised her father for always being on his phone. After reading SASOP's warning, I wondered about my own usage stats. According to the dashboard in my device's Digital Wellbeing and Parental Controls centre, I spend four to five hours on my phone daily. Screenshot Screenshot Screenshot I contacted other South African parents about their screen habits for this piece. Here's what they shared: Khaya (8h25m): Acknowledges work demands that necessitate usage but vows to be more present. Tinashe (eight to 10 hours): Admits his daughter associates him with his computer. Marilynn (5h45m): Calls her usage 'excessive' and feels guilty. Iavan (5h50m): Justifies nighttime scrolling as 'downtime'. Lerato (7h40m): Shares devices with kids watching YouTube. Hein (10h20m): Acknowledges that his screen time doesn't set a healthy example. Their honesty reminds me of an uncomfortable truth: children learn by observation. 'I don't think it's the healthiest example because my daughter associates me with my computer a lot, however I do try and manage her screen time and encourage breaks for outdoor time or other activities. Sometimes I'll switch everything off and leave music in the background,' says Tinashe. Lerato's screen time. As Schoeman notes: 'We cannot expect children to moderate screen time when they see adults constantly glued to phones.' Practical tools for change The solution isn't shaming ourselves and others or abandoning screens but finding balance. Both Apple and Android devices offer built-in tools: - Screen Time Tracking (iOS/Android): Shows daily/weekly usage per app. - App Limits: Set daily caps on usage for specific apps. - Downtime/Focus Mode: Blocks non-essential apps during set hours. - Bedtime Mode: Silences notifications and grays out screens. - Do Not Disturb: Pauses alerts during family time or work. Schoeman also recommends: - No screens under age two; less than one hour for ages two to five; less than two hours for older kids. - Device-free meals and bedrooms. - Modelling breaks and offline activities. - Overnight device custody for teens. Small changes, big impact As Lerato discovered, simple swaps, like outdoor chores with kids, can reshape family habits. Reflecting on her goals, Marilynn says: 'Ideally, I'd like to take that number down to two hours or so. With all the research around the negative impacts of increased screen time, I feel quite guilty that I'm not setting a better example and do hope to do better.' 'Children don't need perfection,' reminds Schoeman, 'they need consistency.' Putting phones away at dinner or disabling notifications during homework sends powerful messages. With South Africa's screen stats among the world's highest, I find it ironic that we must not forget that our children are watching (us). The question of what our solution to the crisis highlighted by SASOP isn't just about their screen time but ours, too. As the parents, we spoke to demonstrate that awareness is the first step toward change. What will your screen time teach your child today? - To check your screen time on an Android device, open your settings and scroll to Digital Wellbeing and Parental Controls or a similar setting. You can find your screen time report on an Apple device in your control centre.