Tayebwa, who officiated at the high-level policymaker’s engagement on financing for young people, organised by the Uganda Parliamentary Forum for Children (UPFC) on Wednesday in Kampala, called upon the government to stop the surge in children seeing adult material.
"Our children are exposed to cartoons of violence, and our teens are exposed to pornography. In Muslim countries, pornography is blocked. Tell me how much we can lose as an economy if we block pornographic sites in the country. Pornography is killing us," he said.
The Deputy Speaker also directed the Minister of Youth and Children to work with other agencies, including the Ministry of ICT and National Guidance, to borrow from Muslim countries that have successfully blocked access to pornographic sites for underage children.
"Minister for ICT, why aren’t you blocking pornography? What value is it adding to us as a nation, apart from destroying the model family? What are we getting out of it? I think, Honourable Minister for Children and Youths, you should also petition your colleagues; this is an issue to discuss in parliament," Tayebwa said.
He also urged parents to go back to the African belief that "a child is brought up by the community".
"Growing up, everyone in my community could offer a child food if they were hungry, and likewise, anyone could punish you as a child if you were not in school. But these days, the community has abandoned that critical role of raising a child as a whole. We have abandoned that," he noted, asking the line minister to do what it takes to ensure that young people are protected.
Youth and Children Affairs State Minister Sarah Nyirabashitsi Mateke decried the little funding allocated to her ministry.
"As I speak now, this Financial Year, you have given me sh20 million for street children. That means every quarter, I have five million (sh5 million). What can I do with five million?" the Minister wondered.
Mateke called for the recruitment of paediatricians in every district, saying the country is losing very many children.
"We need paediatricians in every district. We are losing very many children, and I think we need to address that," she added.
Margaret Makhoha, the Chairperson of the Uganda Parliamentary Forum for Children, said Uganda has no single budget for child protection, but rather allocations are subsumed in various programmes, sub-programmes, and activities across the different government Ministries, departments, and agencies.
She said that the multi-agency nature of child protection is an obstacle to the emergence of coherent, integrated child protection systems and an even greater obstacle to developing management information systems for child protection.
"All relevant line Ministries, departments, and Agencies should have a clear understanding of their role in child protection and prepare their budgets accordingly," she said.
Makhoha implored sector players to ensure that children's issues are a priority in this country.
"We should not base our decision on the available funds in the resource envelope but rather consider it a need."