Call for an end to violence
against children in Myanmar
Conflict in Rakhine State, western Myanmar (ANSA) |
A children’s rights group expresses concern after 20
children are injured in shelling in Rakhine state.
By Robin Gomes
A rights group has strongly condemned all forms of violence
against children in conflict situations as fighting between Myanmar’s army and
the insurgent Arakan Army intensified in Rakhine state.
Some 20 children were injured when their school was hit by
mortar shells in Buthidaung township in Rakhine on Thursday. Government
forces and the Arakan Army have accused each other over the shelling.
‘Save the Children’ condemns attack
“Our thoughts are with the children and their families
impacted by this horrible incident,” said Duncan Harvey, national director for
Save the Children in Myanmar.
“It is not just our moral obligation to make sure children
are safe and secure but a legal one too. All the warring parties in Myanmar
have a duty under international law to make sure children are protected and
schools are kept out of the line of fire.”
For a child in a conflict zone, Harvey said, school provides
access to a safe space to learn, protection from risks such as violence, child
marriage and recruitment into armed groups, and a crucial sense of routine and
calm.
“Attacks on schools are one of the six grave violations
against children and this is yet another tragic indication that conflict is
intensifying for children,” he added.
Rakhine conflict
At least seven civilians have been killed and 30 injured in
the past 13 days in fighting in Rakhine, according to aid groups.
The Rakhine conflict has killed at least 90 civilians and
displaced thousands more since it flared up again in December 2018.
At least 44,000 people are displaced in 119 sites in Rakhine
and more than 1,800 people are displaced in 12 sites in Chin state, according
to the UN.
The Arakan Army is a largely Buddhist militia fighting for
greater autonomy and rights of indigenous ethnic Rakhine in the state.
Rakhine also has a separate conflict that has seen more than
700,000 Muslim Rohingya flee to neighbouring Bangladesh since August 2017 due
to military offensives.
UN against violence against children
On Wednesday, International Day against the Use of Child
Soldiers, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres lamented that
hostilities were soaring against some 250 million youth living in countries
affected by fighting.
Speaking at a high-level Security Council briefing at the UN
in New York, he said emphasized that children have “no role in conflict” and
that “attacks on hospitals and schools deny children education, healthcare and
lifesaving emergency assistance and force families from their homes”.
Guterres pointed out that children in war zones are
threatened by “horrific abuses” such as sexual violation, abduction, being
enlisted as child soldiers or exploited as messengers.
“These violations cause lasting damage to the children
themselves, and to their communities and societies to which they belong”,
Guterres said, warning that this can “feed the grievances and frustrations that
lead to extremism, creating a vicious circle of tension and violence.”
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét