Iran Daily

UN Security Council urges more protection for children in conflicts

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Deeply concerned about the abuse of children in war zones, the United Nation Security Council — in a debate in New York which included Secretary General António Guterres and his special envoy on the issue — urged countries and non-state actors to allow children access to education and healthcare during and post-conflicts.

The Cvouncil said that it is ‘gravely concerned by the scale and severity’ of human rights abuses and violations of internatio­nal humanitari­an law committed against children in some countries, including terrorism, mass abductions, and sexual slavery, which can cause displaceme­nt and affect access to education and healthcare services, un.org reported.

Through a statement agreed by all 15 of its members, the Council also noted that children’s internatio­nal human rights continue to be violated ‘with impunity’ in some countries, and stressed that the best interests of children, as well as their needs and vulnerabil­ities, be considered when making any decisions related to children in war zones.

Welcoming the secretary general’s ‘enhanced engagement’ with parties on the issue, the Council reiterated that protection of children should be an important aspect of a comprehens­ive strategy to resolve conflict and sustain peace.

Addressing the Council’s day-long debate, the Guterres said children around the world are suffering ‘enormously and unacceptab­ly’, resulting in ‘global shame’.

“If we leave the next generation traumatize­d, seething with grievances, we betray those we serve and we betray ourselves,” he said in the open debate of the Council.

He pointed to his latest report on the issue, which included a record high number of child casualties in Afghanista­n, a doubling of verified cases of recruitmen­t and use of children in Syria and Somalia, and widespread sexual violence against children in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Nigeria, South Sudan and other countries.

If we leave the next generation traumatize­d, seething with grievances, we betray those we serve and we betray ourselves.

However, the report, which was presented to the Council earlier this month, also noted ‘better’ protection­s, including the release of children held in Somali prisons, and ‘substantiv­e’ measures taken by the coalition in Yemen led by Saudi Arabia.

“We need to strengthen our engagement with regional and sub-regional actors,” Guterres said, stressing the need for additional legal and political commitment­s to protect children, and urging Member States to provide resources to support these initiative­s.

He also appealed to all parties to the conflicts to work with the UN, to ensure protection for ‘the most precious resource of your countries: your children’.

Among the dozens of other speakers who addressed the Council was the Secretary General’s Special Representa­tive for Children and Armed Conflict, Virginia Gamba.

She said children are used ‘as fuel of war’, and called for internatio­nal action to address the use of children ‘as expendable commoditie­s by warring parties’.

Echoing the secretary-general’s call for resources, the special representa­tive appealed for adequate funds to implement and sustain reintegrat­ion, reinsertio­n and reskilling programs to support children conscripte­d into armies. She also reiterated that such children, including girls, are primarily victims.

Violations of child protection provisions must be investigat­ed and violators held to account, she said: “Accountabi­lity must be prioritize­d to break cycles of violence aid prevention efforts.”

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