Over 10,000 children killed or maimed in conflicts in 2017 – UN
A United Nations annual report details the atrocities being committed against children in armed conflicts worldwide. The total of 21,000 violations of children’s rights reported in 2017 was a sharp increase on the previous year.
An activist places some of 5,000 flowers laid at the US Capitol that they said were to remember the 5,000 children they say have been killed by Saudi-led coalition bombings in Yemen. Washington DC, USA. (AP)
More than 10,000 children were killed or maimed amid armed conflicts worldwide last year, while others were raped, forced to serve as armed soldiers or caught in attacks on schools and hospitals, a United Nations report said on Wednesday.
A total of more than 21,000 violations of children’s right were reported in 2017 – a sharp increase from the previous year, according to the annual “Children and Armed Conflict” report.
The UN blames a US-backed Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen for at least half of the more than 1,300 child deaths or injuries recorded in that poor nation. They were victims of aerial and ground attacks by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates on Iranian-backed Houthi rebels opposed to Yemen’s internationally recognised government.
Among the casualties tallied in the report were child soldiers as young as 11 fighting in Yemen’s civil war and in other countries, the UN said.
“The point is, these kids should not be treated like children of a lesser God; they deserve the same rights as every kid to live their lives at least meaningfully and to be given a chance at recovery,” said Virginia Gamba, the UN special representative for children and armed conflict.
She said the report left UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres feeling “outraged.”
The 21,000 violations of children’s rights included 10,000 who were slain or maimed, especially in Iraq, Myanmar, the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen, the report said.
The total was a dramatic increase from 15,500 such cases counted in 2016. “The secretary-general is outraged at this number, a significant increase compared to previous years,” said his spokesman, Stephane Dujarric.
Among the report’s findings:
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Almost half the 881 verified child casualties in Nigeria resulted from suicide attacks, including the use of children as human bombs. Over 1,900 children were detained because of their or their parents’ alleged association with the Boko Haram militant organisation.
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At least 1,036 children were held in Iraqi detention facilities on national security-related charges, mostly for their alleged association with Daesh.
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1,221 children were recruited and used as soldiers in South Sudan.
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The Al Shabab group in Somalia allegedly abducted more than 1,600 children, some recruited and armed and others who became victims of sexual violence.
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Children in Myanmar, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen were prevented from receiving life-saving support.
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Syrian children were trapped in besieged areas amid deteriorating living conditions.