Bangkok--3 Dec--Grayling
Soft Toys for Education — helping kids create their own future
This is the season for Soft Toys for Education — one of the easiest most effective and certainly cuddliest ways to help children, their families and their society for generations to come. This year, from 4 November 2012 until 12 January 2013, for every soft toy or hand puppet bought, the IKEA Foundation will donate 1EUR to help fund education projects supported by UNICEF and Save the Children. Read more in the appendix on how soft little toys can make a huge difference in children’s education around the world.
Local Launch Special with Global Charities in Thailand
In addition to the global campaign, The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Thailand and Save the Children Thailand today launched a local campaign to benefitchildren in the Southern Thailand. In partnership with IKEA Thailand, the organizationsare encouraging customers to participate in the “Twice the Joy-Share your Toy”soft toy campaign forthe children of Yala, Narathiwat and Pattani provinces. The campaign runs from now until 12 January2013 at the IKEA Bangna store.
“We want to give Thai families who visit IKEA Bangna the opportunity not only tobuy special soft toys for their own children, but also to donateanother soft toy to share their joy with children in the southernmost provinces of the country,” said Ms. Edelweiss Silan, Director of Programsfor Save the Children.
“Soft toys are good for hugging and cuddling, giving children a sense of warmth.” said Ms.Silan. “They are helpful in providing children witha sense of security and comfort and can be used to stimulate play, spark creativity and introduce a variety of educational activities”.
Commenting on the initiative, BijayaRajbhandari, UNICEF Thailand’s Representative, said the needs of children in the South were particularly pressing.
“We know from our assessments that children living in the far South of the country are especially disadvantaged,” said Mr.Rajbhandari. “The three provinces are among the country’spoorest and the situation of children in these provinces is among the least favourable.”
The soft toy campaign runs in parallel with a global partnership betweenUNICEF, Save the Children and IKEA that have been in place since 2003. Proceeds from soft toys sold in IKEA stores around the world go to the IKEA Foundation’s funding of children in care institutions and schools in communities across the globe.
“This global campaignhas contributed to real change where it matters and also continues to build for the future in a self-sustainable manner,” said Lars Svensson, Regional Sustainability Manager Ikano (Thailand) Limited. “Since we operate in Thailand and we also have our global partners working locally, we think it is just natural to extend that global collaboration in a local Thai context.”
Svensson said that “for every soft toy customers buy and place in the drop box for Thai children in the South, IKEA Thailand will give one soft toy too. And we are all doing it together: UNICEF, Save the Children, IKEA and the customers in Thailand.”
“It is great to see how global initiatives and collaborationcan go local. Our friends and colleagues at UNICEF and Save the Childrenare making sure that the donated toys will go directly to their child development centersin the south and children there can play with soft toys to stimulate their imagination and promote their intellectual development,” Svensson said.
For more information about UNICEF and its work in Thailand visit: www.unicef.or.th
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Twitter: unicef_thailand