Malaysia kids recover after the Tsunami
A group of teenagers gather to express themselves through drawing. They were all affected by the tsunami but today they are most concerned about the dangers of drugs.
16-year-old Nor Soffi adds color to her sign warning against drug use. She comes here regularly, under the guidance of a local artist.
This is the latest in a series of art and theater workshops for young people in Kota Kuala Muda and the island of Langkawi - the hardest hit areas of the Malaysian coast.
The meetings were originally conceived by UNICEF and its partner organization, EMPOWER, as a place for youth to learn to open up and deal with the impact of the tsunami.
UNICEF and EMPOWER also set up youth leadership camps to build confidence and motivation.
Two years later, many teenagers say the tsunami has become less and less relevant. So the activities now focus on more pressing issues such as HIV and AIDS, sexuality and violence.
Embed code for Blogs
Simply copy and paste the following HTML code below into your blog, website, or MySpace profile.
Copy to Clipboard
Share this video:
Simply click the button below and select your social bookmarking site.
Tag Cloud
Category: Human Services
Living life behind bars. Pascal is just one of 85 juvenile inmates doing time in Douala’s Newbell prison. Here they live
on top of each other. They sleep, eat and wash in an area meant for only 30 prisoners. An open sewer runs...
Views: 57314
Category: Human Services
Junior Goodwill Ambassador ‘Name Six’ visited child victims of the recent natural disaster, in ‘child friendly spaces’
set up by UNICEF in or next to camps for those displaced by the cyclones and related flooding.
Cyclone...
Tags:
child victims, natural disaster, sanitation and hygiene, working, Child friendly spaces, health, nutrition, education, protection, human rights, protecting
Views: 79730
Category: Science & Technology
Animated graphics depicting how social networking and service-oriented architecture are each helping enable the...
Views: 13114
Category: Public Benefit
hese women in Burkina Faso are doing more than collecting trash – they're reclaiming their independence. They
are part of an association of women, many of whom were left by their husbands for younger wives, or women whose
husbands...
Tags:
: collecting trash, burkina faso, association of women, vulnerable, soap, cosmetics, orphaned, money
Views: 64559
Category: Politics & Goverment
worries.
Mattie Carvon, Social Security beneficiary:
We really didn't anticipate all this. We just thought that we were going to get a check.â
Like Mattie, more than 20 million of retirees, disabled veterans and low-wage...
Views: 32431
Category: Human Services
Youth journalists from around the Caribbean are scouting the streets of Georgetown Guyana looking for stories on
issues that concerns their generation. While asking challenging questions, they get unexpected answers.
SOUNDBITE...
Views: 19276
Category: Disaster Relief
It's been almost 4 weeks since cyclone Ivan hit Madagascar, killing 93 people and leaving 350,000 without a home.
Ivan was the countryâs most devastating cyclone since 1980. Raging flood waters have deprived farmers of...
Views: 40441
Category: Science & Technology
The EWEC 2008 event will bring together over 4,000 decision makers and key players from
the wind energy and electricity sectors, who will debate these challenges and opportunities
during four days of intensive networking, business...
Views: 27867
Category: Human Services
The Power of Partnerships: The President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief Fourth Annual
Report to Congress underscores the importance of the close working relationship between the
American people and host nations in the fight...
Views: 34594
Category: Human Services
At a remote police station in eastern Guinea-Bissau, 53 boys are resting after police
caught a man trying to smuggle them across the border into neighbouring Senegal. The man in
custody is a marabout, a religious instructor....
Views: 22604
Category: Human Services
Everyday 6400 girls are taught in this school. Due to the lack of classrooms and qualified
teachers lessons take place over three shifts, with some being held in tents or under trees.
UNICEF is working alongside the ministry of...
Views: 22394
Category: Human Services
Approximately 120,000 children in Burkina Faso have lost a parent to HIV/AIDS. Among them,
is Kiemde, 12, who lost his father two years ago. Now, he dedicates every weekend to
teaching his classmates and friends how to protect...
Views: 19971


























Lunar New Year-Year of the Rat
UNICEF: Lebanon Unexploded Ordnance
UNICEF PSA aims to promote the importance of breastfeeding
Volvo: Ocean Race
Environmental Defense - Train
Rotary International: Symbols
General Motors: Hip Hop Booster Seats
General Motors: Consumer Produced Super Bowl Ads
Young Civic Engagement - Locusts
Montage - India's achievements
IBM Release of Blade Center
World Bank expects funding of up to $1.4bn to the Democratic Republic of Congo to accelerate development
UNICEF - burkinafasobisongo
Peace Corps: Life is Calling
UNICEF: Guinea townships take extra steps to make sure their children receive a quality education
UNICEF: Jakarta Flood Aid
UNICEF - Salwa aman ethiopia