Save the Children: 'One child
in five is a victim of war'
Children victims of conflict in South Sudan (AFP) |
A report released on Friday by the global 'Save the
Children' charity reveals a sobering world scenario in which a record number of
children are being affected by conflict and where, increasingly, international
rules and norms are flouted.
By Linda Bordoni
Pope Francis has repeatedly warned that across
the planet, “a true world war is being fought piecemeal” and repeatedly he has
decried the fact that so many children continue to be victims of conflict.
This reality was confirmed by a report, released on Friday
by the global children’s charity, “Save the Children” that reveals
that more children are living in areas affected by armed conflict than at any
time in more than 20 years.
The report, entitled “Stop the War on Children:
Protecting Children in 21st Century Conflict”, reveals that
420 million children – that’s nearly one in five – were living in
conflict-affected areas in 2017, up 30 million from the previous year.
Save the Children’s Keyan Salarkia, one of the
co-writers of the report, spoke to Vatican News about some of the report’s most
salient findings.
Salarkia said the report sets out two core arguments, the
first being that the scale of the problem regarding children in conflict is
increasing, as is the scale of their suffering.
“One fifth of children worldwide live in conflict, which is
the highest point since the end of the Cold War” he said.
Children increasingly at risk
What’s more, children in conflict zones are increasingly at
risk.
One of the key findings that testifies the brutality of
modern day conflicts, Salarkia explained, is that “half a million babies have
died in the last five years alone in just ten countries”.
Another sobering fact is that 870,000 children have died in
conflict during the same period, “before they have even managed to turn
five-years old”.
“So, Selarkia noted, we are seeing both an increase in the
number of children in conflict and increasing harm to those children”.
Ten worst countries for children
Selarkia said the report looks at a number of things
including the combination of the number of children in conflict and their
exposure to violations.
He explained there are ‘red-lights’ defined by the United
Nations and that include recruitment and use in armed groups, sexual violence,
abductions.
“Combining the two, we came up with a list of the ten worst
places in 2017 and they include Yemen and Syria, tragic icons of modern
conflict, but also places like South Sudan and Nigeria where in the last
three or four years children have continued to be exposed to great risk.
Other countries pinpointed by the report are Afghanistan,
the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Iraq, Mali and
Somalia.
100 years of ‘Save the Children’
Selarkia said the report coincides with 100 years of Save
the Children which means that for at least the past 100 years there have been
organizations and charities dedicated to the promotion and protection of
children’s rights that respond to the needs of children.
“What we have seen particularly over the last 10 or 15
years, is less compliance with international rules and norms and the
perpetration of violations like sexual violence, killing and maiming of
children,” he said.
All this, coupled with the fact that those responsible are
not being held to account.
“Those things combined, have led to environment where not
only are children increasingly affected, but perpetrators of violence are not
being held to account, and this recreates a pattern of violence against
children” he said.
Recommendations
Selarkia said the report is officially being launched at the
Munich Security Conference in Germany, a meeting attended by world leaders and
policy-makers.
It includes an appeal to take action in three ways:
- Upholding standards and norms: not bombing schools, not
attacking health care centers, not denying access arbitrarily;
- Accountability: making sure that where violations are
taking place, individuals are facing justice;
- Pursue new ways to support children’s recovery from the
horrors of conflict and take practical steps to support and protect children in
crisis zones.
What can we do?
What we can do, Selarkia concludes, is to make sure that the
people responsible for making these changes – our policy-makers and our
government leaders – excert pressure so that those who are responsible for
violence against children and for not protecting them be rendered accountable.
“So put pressure on your government, demanding protection
for children in conflict and supporting the narrative that ‘children are
children’: we need to re-establish the centrality of child protection”.
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