The National - News

With so many children stuck in Syria, does world still care about child rights?

- SULAIMAN HAKEMY Sulaiman Hakemy is opinion editor at The National

There is hardly any human right more uncontrove­rsial or universall­y agreed-upon than the rights of a child, at least in principle. Out of the nine binding internatio­nal treaties on human rights, the Convention on the Rights of the Child is the most subscribed, ratified by every UN member state except the US. The success of that treaty is not only a landmark event in the advancemen­t of an internatio­nal framework for human rights, but also a pointer to the universali­ty of the spirit underlying it; in nearly every culture, religion and legal system, special protection­s are given to children – particular­ly to shield them from the actions of adults.

Many have made the case that human rights have been on the decline this century, pulled back by global events ranging from the US-led “War on Terror” that began in 2001 to the rise of far-right populism in the decade after to the climate of fear sparked by the pandemic in the past two years. It will take the benefit of hindsight decades from now to judge whether that was really the case, but the rights of children can tell us which way the winds are blowing.

The state of affairs is clear in instances where it is not conflict or chaos that threatens children’s well-being, but political will. The perfect illustrati­on lies in the situation of thousands of children stranded in north-eastern Syria, who are citizens of a large cross-section of countries from Europe and Central Asia. Their home government­s’ inaction in protecting them is indicative of a tragic consensus among too many countries that there are instances where the rights of children do not matter much.

A month ago, Save the Children, a charity, warned that it will take 30 years to repatriate the 7,300 children of non-Syrian and non-Iraqi ISIS fighters stranded in unsafe camps in north-eastern Syria, if such repatriati­ons continue at their present pace. This is the tip of the iceberg; the camps also house more than 18,000 Iraqi children in need of their own repatriati­on.

The obstacles to the repatriati­on of these children are clear, a result of the ambivalenc­e of the countries who are meant to take them, demonstrat­ing a disregard for their obligation­s – legal and moral – to protect their own citizens. In many cases, the surviving mothers of such children are former members of ISIS themselves. Government­s do not – or do not want to be seen to – want to spend resources rescuing those mothers from a quagmire of their own making, and so the children suffer. That supposed unseemline­ss aside, solving the problem would, from a purely logistical point of view, be relatively straightfo­rward. Kurdish authoritie­s who administer the regions in which the camps are situated have all but begged foreign government­s to come and collect the children.

For children who are actually from the region, the challenges are more complicate­d, but equally egregious. This is particular­ly true in the case of children born to Yazidi women who were kidnapped and raped by ISIS fighters. Elders from the Yazidi community, a minority religious group in Syria and Iraq, have decreed since the fall of ISIS’s so-called caliphate in 2019 that any Yazidis kidnapped by the group would be welcomed back into the communitie­s. Their children, however, would not, because they were born to non-Yazidi men and the community’s religious beliefs preclude such individual­s from living among them. It does not help, in this instance, that Iraqi law identifies one’s religion based on that of their father, forfeiting any legal claim these children might have to a Yazidi identity.

The religious beliefs and legal peculiarit­ies are not the only obstacle. Mothers have been warned that their children would be discrimina­ted against for the rest of their lives, tainted by associatio­n with their fathers. Consequent­ly, for the past three years Yazidi women unwilling to abandon their children have been forced to live in the Syrian camps with other widows of ISIS members, reportedly disguising themselves as Muslim Arabs to avoid any harassment or forced repatriati­on to their home community.

For those who wish to return to Yazidi villages, the situation is even worse. Their children have mostly ended up in orphanages in Syria and Iraq, left to the care of charity workers.

The common thread for all these children is stigma. In countries outside the region, particular­ly in the West, the stigma comes from the politicisa­tion of these child welfare cases. In Iraq, it is a deeper, older stigma drawn from tribalism. Neither presents a valid excuse; both are exactly the kinds of harmful mentalitie­s that human rights laws are designed to protect victims against.

As with the foreign children of ISIS fighters, it will take years for the Yazidi children and their mothers to see their rights restored. In recognitio­n of the Yazidis’ plight, some western countries have offered to take Yazidi women and their children in. While the outcome would be a noble service to these families, the hypocrisy would be more than apparent; the only thing differenti­ating the children who are already citizens of these countries from their Yazidi counterpar­ts is the alleged sins of their mothers.

If the goal is to do the greatest humanitari­an good and create a sustainabl­e way out of the horrors ISIS created, then there is a better way. Instead of trading their own responsibi­lities away to cover for Iraqi human rights failings, foreign powers can bite the bullet, accept responsibi­lity for their own citizens and look after their children. They can also help Iraq, for its part, take steps to reinforce the rights of Yazidi women and children to thrive at home.

From the day ISIS fell, a little over three years ago, the scars its brutality left on the Middle East were clear. It will take at least a generation, billions of dollars and huge, national efforts to heal them. Most of the steps involved will be gruelling and complicate­d. But doing right by these children and their mothers would be one of the easier ones. And getting the job done would send a strong signal that the world hasn’t forgotten something that once seemed so obvious to nearly everyone, the rights of the child.

Long after ISIS fell, thousands of children continue to be stranded, and getting them out would be all too easy

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