The Columbus Dispatch

No place for kids

UNICEF considers most dangerous places for children in 2017

- By Palko Karasz, Jina Moore and Ceylan Yeginsu

In wars around the globe, thousands of children were frontline targets, used as human shields and recruited to fight this year on “a shocking scale,” UNICEF said this past week. The United Nations agency warned against normalizin­g the brutality, a sentiment it has echoed in reports year after year.

New York Times correspond­ents have followed the plight of children caught up in war, as well as those suffering from the fallout of these conflicts. Among the places reported in 2017 as the worst for children:

Violence in Afghanista­n At least 700 children were Sixteen-year-old Maryam refused to carry out a suicide bombing after she was kidnapped by Boko Haram. In northeast Nigeria and Cameroon, Boko Haram forced at least 135 children to act as suicide bombers this past year, UNICEF said. “I really didn’t expect to survive,” Maryan said.

killed in the first nine months of the year in Afghanista­n, UNICEF said. As violence in civilian areas of the country intensifie­d, children were often caught in the crossfire.

After an explosion at a playground killed five children, The Times reported on how “indiscrimi­nate improvised explosive devices” were the biggest cause of casualties among children in Afghanista­n.

Central African Republic

Fighting flared anew in the Central African Republic, forcing more than 150,000 people from their homes, the most since conflict in the country peaked three years ago. Children have been killed, raped, abducted or recruited by armed groups, UNICEF said.

Separately, Ugandan troops, on a mission to catch Joseph Kony, the leader of the notorious Lord’s Resistance Army, are facing accusation­s of rape, sexual slavery and exploitati­on of young girls.

Conflict in Congo

Conflict in the Kasai region of central Congo began in

mid-2016, after the government refused to recognize the appointmen­t of a new traditiona­l chief. UNICEF estimates the fighting that has erupted since that time has forced 850,000 children to flee their homes.

Several hundred children were killed in combat or held hostage by armed groups and used as human shields, a U.N. agency reported this year. More than 600 schools have been attacked, and hundreds of thousands of children are at risk of starvation because farmers have missed two planting seasons in a row, according to aid groups.

The fighting also has a political backdrop: Among President Joseph Kabila’s strongest foes is Moise Katumbi, a businessma­n from Kasai who has made no secret of his presidenti­al ambitions. Kabila’s second term as president of Congo expired at the end of 2016, but his government has twice punted the presidenti­al poll, now scheduled for 2018. Children clamor for food at a refugee camp in Bangladesh in November. Almost 60 percent of the more than half a million Rohingya people driven from their homes in Myanmar are children, UNICEF said. It is one of the most rapid mass exoduses in modern history. Boko Haram terrorism

The story of the Chibok schoolgirl­s of Nigeria, who were abducted by Boko Haram — an extreme Islamic terrorist group — in 2014, ricocheted around the world. Some were freed during a prisoner swap, but the group’s atrocities against children did not end with that release, and the victims embarked on a slow process of healing. Still others remain in captivity.

In northeast Nigeria and Cameroon, Boko Haram forced at least 135 children to act as suicide bombers this year, UNICEF said.

Human shields in Iraq

Correspond­ents from The Times analyzed reports, which surfaced in March, that said scores of civilians — many of them children — had been killed by U.S. air strikes in Mosul, Iraq. A U.S.-led coalition had

been fighting to take back Iraq’s second-largest city from Islamic State fighters.

After the Iraqi government declared victory over the Islamic State in Mosul in July, a photograph­er for The Times came across abandoned and traumatize­d children suspected of being used as human shields by ISIS fighters. Many of them had lost their families in the violence and were taken to camps for the displaced.

War-torn Syria

As the Syrian civil war entered its sixth year in March, UNICEF announced that 2016 had been the worst year for Syrian children, reporting that at least 652 died as a result of bombs and other violence.

Children growing up in areas controlled by Islamic State militants have been exposed to astonishin­g levels of brutality. Times correspond­ents visited Syrian families in Beirut, who described the violence that their children had witnessed while trying to flee from the extremist group and how they risked being recruited by their fighters.

Rohingya refugees

Almost 60 percent of the more than half a million Rohingya people violently driven out of their homes in Myanmar’s Rakhine state are children, UNICEF said. Many were separated from their families or fled on their own after being attacked or having witnessed brutal violence.

A Times correspond­ent visited a refugee camp in Bangladesh near the border with Myanmar, where Rohingya refugees recounted the atrocities committed by Myanmar government soldiers.

One woman described how they had snatched her baby from her arms and threw him into a fire before raping her. Other survivors recalled seeing government soldiers stabbing babies, gang-raping girls and beheading young boys.

Soldiers in South Sudan

South Sudan, one of the world’s youngest countries, is mired in conflict. What began as a feud between the country’s two top politician­s erupted four years ago into an outright war, often fought along ethnic lines. It is ripping the country apart.

UNICEF said more than 19,000 children have been recruited to fight and more than 2,300 children have been killed or injured since the conflict began.

The conflict has displaced 4 million South Sudanese — roughly onethird of the country’s population. More than half are children.

Recruitmen­t in Somalia

Nearly 200 children were brought into armed groups every month this year in Somalia, according to UNICEF. That figure fits a trend that began in 2015, documented earlier by the U.N. Secretary-General’s Office, of an increase in the use of children by armed groups.

Some are recruited with promises of school tuition or jobs; others are kidnapped and pressed into service. The vast majority of child soldiers are forced into the ranks of al-Shabab, which is allied with al-Qaida, although 15 percent of known child soldiers are serving in the Somali national army, according to the report.

Yemen’s children

Saudi Arabia and its allies have bombed Yemen for more than two years, hoping to oust Iranian-aligned rebels who seized power. The conflict has left the country in ruins and impoverish­ed, and has starved its population. Many desperate families see two ways out for their children: selling them off as brides or allowing their recruitmen­t as soldiers.

UNICEF said the fighting has left more than 5,000 children dead or injured, and 11 million in need for humanitari­an assistance.

Explosives in Ukraine

Rebel-held eastern Ukraine is home to 220,000 children who live under the threat of mines and other explosives from nearly four years of conflict between separatist­s and the government in Kiev.

The fighting there escalated sharply in mid-December. A Ukrainian village and a town were hit with rocket-artillery barrages, wounding eight people and damaging about 50 homes.

 ?? [IVOR PRICKETT / THE NEW YORK TIMES] ?? Iraqi special-forces soldiers save a child from an area still controlled by Islamic State fighters in Mosul, Iraq, this summer. Scores of children have been killed by air strikes there, and many children were left alone after losing family members to...
[IVOR PRICKETT / THE NEW YORK TIMES] Iraqi special-forces soldiers save a child from an area still controlled by Islamic State fighters in Mosul, Iraq, this summer. Scores of children have been killed by air strikes there, and many children were left alone after losing family members to...
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? [TOMAS MUNITA/THE ??
[TOMAS MUNITA/THE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States