The Borneo Post

Young girls primary victims of humanitari­an strife

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PARIS: Girls are the primary victims of humanitari­an crises, suffering abuse from forced marriage to denial of schooling and are “14 times more likely to die than boys in a conflict,” the Plan Internatio­nal NGO said Sunday.

The group is to unveil at the United Nations conclusion­s from three investigat­ions into the fate of youngsters — ethnic Rohingya from Myanmar in a refugee camp in Bangladesh, a second group in the Chad Basin and a third in South Sudan, “three particular­ly unstable regions,” in the NGO’s words.

Its research details “forced marriage, kidnapping­s, violence, sexual abuse, slavery” and a huge lack in education opportunit­ies.

In crowded refugee camps in Uganda the group interviewe­d 249 girls aged 10 to 19 from South Sudan who described “a continuum of violence having become the norm in the home

That is not surprising because the conflict in South Sudan has been characteri­sed by rampant cruelty, including levels of extreme violence against women and children.

and in the community.”

“That is not surprising because the conflict in South Sudan has been characteri­sed by rampant cruelty, including levels of extreme violence against women and children,” the report said.

The NGO added that “one adolescent in four considered suicide at least once” in the year preceding the study.

Seventy- seven per cent also said they did not have enough food to eat.

In Chad Basin, which Plan Internatio­nal described as being caught in one of the world’s most serious humanitari­an crises, one in three teenagers questioned said they did not feel safe at home, one in five had been beaten in the month preceding the investigat­ion and one in ten had suffered sexual abuse.

Of 449 girls the NGO interviewe­d in Nigeria, Niger and Cameroon, two thirds were separated from their fathers due to conflict and in 30 percent of cases from both parents.

Sixty- two per cent said they lacked food meaning they had to seek work in the black economy or travel large distances in order to seek firewood or water, in so doing opening themselves up to the further possibilit­y of harassment or violence.

Insecurity acted as a brake on educationa­l advancemen­t with many girls afraid of what might befall them on the way to school.

Also limiting their schooling were factors such as premature or forced marriages, with many girls being married off as early as 14 or 15.

In Niger, three quarters of girls are married before the age of 18.

Rohingya girls stuck in a refugee camp over the Bangladesh­i border at Cox’s Bazar are also deprived of education.

Almost two- thirds said they lack schooling due to a multitude of reasons including hunger, beatings, rape, kidnapping and forced prostituti­on.

One in five girls aged between 13 and 15 endured forced marriages, Plan Internatio­nal added.

One girl facing marriage to somebody she said she did not know commented “they couldn’t do it in Myanmar but they can here”.

Report

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