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FC Barcelona players Lionel Messi and Jose Manuel Pinto share football skills with young athletes with disabilities


WEBWIRE

BANGKOK - On the first day of FC Barcelona’s trip to Thailand, internationally acclaimed players Lionel Messi and Jose Manuel Pinto spent the morning sharing football skills with children who have intellectual disabilities.

The players and participants represented a unified group of young people with and without disabilities participating in sport and promoting team-work and partnership.

FC Barcelona and UNICEF have had a global partnership since 2006 to improve the lives of millions of children by providing them with the opportunity to receive an education, participate in sports and learn positive values such as inclusion. Reflecting the team’s commitment to the partnership, FC Barcelona’s Messi and Pinto answered questions from the 20 children and young people and taught them football skills.

Some of the children and young people play on Thailand’s Special Olympics National Unified Football team, which has qualified for the 2014 Global Unified Cup in Brazil – organized by the Special Olympics and FIFA. The Unified Team is made up of young people with and without intellectual disabilities who train, practice and play together on a regular basis, exemplifying how children with disabilities can meaningfully participate in sports together with other children.

In Thailand, there are an estimated 1 million people with intellectual disabilities, some 600,000 of them children. Studies have shown that providing children with intellectual disabilities opportunities to participate in physical activities and sports can help promote improved physical and mental development as well as communication and social skills. UNICEF Thailand is working with Special Olympics Thailand, a non-government organization, to promote social inclusion for these children through sports training and competitions.

Speaking at the event, Dr. Isiye Ndombi, UNICEF Deputy Regional Director for East Asia and Pacific, commended FC Barcelona for shining the spotlight on the important issue of providing equal opportunities to compete in sports for children with disabilities.

“UNICEF firmly believes that when society includes children with disabilities, it enriches the lives of everyone,” Ndombi said. “By being here today, FC Barcelona is once again showing how its team’s values extend well beyond the football pitch and help reinforce the importance of social inclusion for the most vulnerable children.”

“FC Barcelona wins, but we do it through a style connected with values,” said Mr. Ramon Pont, Vice President of the FC Barcelona Foundation. “It’s through values that you can win. We try to take advantage of the strength of sports to develop people, especially children and UNICEF is our main partner in this challenge.”

Answering a question from the children during a session with players, Messi said: "I’ve played many times with children with disabilities and it is no different than playing with any other children.”

Asked about how to become a great football player, Messi said: “Training is the key. You have to give up a lot. If you love the game, you have to fight for it and you have to want to learn each and every day.”

FC Barcelona is committed to supporting the rights of marginalized children. Since 2006, FC Barcelona has provided €1.5 million annually to support the work of UNICEF.

In 2011, FC Barcelona and UNICEF renewed their partnership for a further three years, focusing on Sport for Development within the wider context of ensuring the right of all children to an education. Through the partnership, UNICEF and the FCB Foundation are committed to providing millions of children with the opportunity to receive an education and learn positive values through an integrated programme of physical education, sports and play in Child Friendly Schools in Brazil, China, Ghana and South Africa.

The football club also features the UNICEF logo on its premier football jersey as a sign of its continued commitment to campaigning for the rights of all children.


About UNICEF
UNICEF works in more than 190 countries and territories to help children survive and thrive, from early childhood through adolescence. The world’s largest provider of vaccines for developing countries, UNICEF supports child health and nutrition, good water and sanitation, quality basic education for all boys and girls, and the protection of children from violence, exploitation, and AIDS. UNICEF is funded entirely by the voluntary contributions of individuals, businesses, foundations and governments. For more information about UNICEF and its work visit www.unicef.org.



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