UN reports ‘shocking’ rise in violations against children in conflict in 2023 | United Nations

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In 2023, children living in conflict situations experienced violence at unbearable levels, according to a new report by the UN Secretary-General on children and armed conflict published today (13 Jun).

Children have been recruited and used including at the frontlines, attacked in their homes, abducted on their way to schools, their schools were military used and their doctors targeted, and the dreadful list goes on.

The evolving nature, complexity, and intensification of armed conflict, as well as the use of explosive weapons in populated areas, has led to a shocking increase in grave violations against children in 2023.

The UN Secretary-General Annual Report on Children and Armed Conflict (CAAC), which included for the first-time information on Haiti and Niger among the 25 situations and one regional monitoring arrangement on the Children and Armed Conflict agenda, revealed that 32,990 grave violations were verified against 22,557 children.

Talking to the press today, Virginia Gamba, Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict, said, “The highest numbers of grave violations during 2023 were first and foremost, the killing and maiming of 11,649 children, second, the recruitment and use of 8,655 children, and third, the abduction of 4,356 children.”

This unprecedented level of suffering was represented by an increase in most grave violations and a continued high level in other grave violations in 2023.

Children suffered from blatant disregard of their rights and of protections enshrined in international humanitarian and human rights law, including the right to life with 11,649 children killed and maimed, representing a 35 percent increase vis-a-vis last year’s report and representing the highest violation verified in the report.

The number of children killed in 2023 (5,301) represents the equivalent of almost 15 children killed every day.

This was followed by the recruitment and use of 8,655 children and the abduction of 4, 356 children.

The highest numbers of grave violations were verified in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Myanmar, Somalia, Nigeria, and the Sudan.

Roughly 50 percent of violations were committed by armed groups, including those designated as terrorists by the United Nations, whereas the rest were committed by government forces, and by unidentified perpetrators, such as landmines and improvised explosive devices.

Armed groups were principally responsible for the abduction, the recruitment and use, and sexual violence against children, while government forces were the main perpetrators of killing and maiming, attacks on schools and hospitals and related personnel, and denial of humanitarian access to children.

The use of explosive weapons continued to have a disastrous impact, killing and maiming children and restraining the delivery of humanitarian aid.

The denial of humanitarian access (5,205) increased by 32 percent in 2023 compared to 2022.

Underreporting due to stigmatization, fear of reprisals, harmful social norms, lack of services, impunity, and safety concerns, cases of conflict-related sexual violence against children (1,470) continue to be an issue which is an increase of 25 percent compared to 2022.

Finally, access to education and health services were compromised for thousands of children, with 1,650 attacks verified on schools and hospitals and related personnel.

Despite multiplying and escalating crises, more than 10,600 children formerly associated with armed forces or groups received protection or reintegration support during 2023.

Reintegration support is essential for their individual well-being and for the broader goals of social cohesion, economic development, and sustainable peace.

Throughout 2023, the United Nations commenced or sustained engagement with parties to conflict as was the case in the CAAC situations of Burkina Faso, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Iraq, Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Mali, Mozambique, Nigeria, the Philippines, Somalia, South Sudan, the Syrian Arab Republic, Ukraine and Yemen, some of which led to the adoption of measures aimed at providing better protection for children affected by armed conflict.

When engagement prospered and measures were put in place including through the signature of action plans and handover protocols, capacity-building initiatives, unilateral commitments, and bilateral dialogues, violations decreased and/or children were released from conflict.

Decreases as a result of engagement and action plans were noted in Iraq, Mozambique, the Philippines, South Sudan, Ukraine, and Yemen.
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