Pakistani actor and UNICEF National Ambassador Saba Qamar marked World Children’s Day by turning “blue” — literally. The actor appeared in a video message dressed in a bright blue shirt, using the colour as a bold symbol to push a nationwide call for children’s rights. And honestly, it’s one of those messages that sticks with you long after you’ve scrolled past it.
In her video, Qamar didn’t go for complicated language or long advocacy speeches. Instead, she spoke plainly, almost like she was talking to every parent, policymaker, and young person at once.
“Every child has a right to learn, to grow up healthy, to live in a safe environment, and to have a voice in the decisions that shape their future,” she said — a reminder that feels painfully relevant given Pakistan’s current challenges.
This year’s World Children’s Day theme leaned heavily on the colour blue — a global symbol for child rights — and Qamar used it exactly as intended: to make people pause, notice, and hopefully engage. She urged Pakistanis to “turn the country blue,” whether by wearing the colour, posting about it, or simply starting conversations that matter.
But behind the simple symbolism lies a serious reality. Pakistan continues to struggle with deep-rooted issues affecting children: early marriages, lack of access to education, adolescent pregnancies, unsafe living environments, and in many cases, children being shut out of decisions that directly affect their futures. Qamar didn’t shy away from that. Instead, she leaned into it — gently but firmly — asking the public to step up for the country’s youngest and most vulnerable.
Her role as UNICEF Pakistan’s national ambassador gives her voice weight, and she’s been using that platform consistently since her appointment. This latest message is just another piece of her broader push to keep children at the centre of public conversation — not just once a year, but every day.
And while celebrity campaigns come and go, Qamar’s message feels different. Maybe it’s the simplicity. Maybe it’s the urgency. Or maybe it’s because, for one day at least, the colour blue felt like a reminder that children’s rights shouldn’t be an afterthought in Pakistan — they should be the starting point.
