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The Balkan region, one year laterTuesday, 21 March 2000: One year after the start of NATO air strikes on Yugoslavia and the massive humanitarian relief effort that followed, UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy declared today that the children of the Balkans region "remain the most endangered children in Europe" and said their long-term prospects remained dreary unless "adults throughout the region fulfill their moral duty to end the ethnic hatred and violence that so insidiously shadow every new generation." "If the past year has taught us anything, it is that war alone does not have the power to destroy a region’s future," Bellamy said. "But ethnic hatred does – and it is ongoing bloodshed based on cultural or ethnic hatred that threatens to destroy the hope that accompanied the return of refugees to Kosovo last June. That’s why I appeal to everyone concerned – governments, communities, individuals – to eschew violence and ethnic hatred and set a new course for the children of the region." Bellamy welcomed this month’s agreement between Bosnian and Croatian leaders to allow 4,000 Bosnian Croat and Croatian Serb refugees to return to their homes within the next three months. "This is a significant step in the right direction," Bellamy said. "We hope it will lead to the return of tens of thousands of refugee children and their families." Bellamy also noted that massive humanitarian relief efforts during the past year had done much to improve the immediate circumstances of the region’s children, pointing out that a UNICEF-led alliance of relief organizations, international donors and local communities had succeeded in getting 97 per cent of primary school children back in class. The effort has also resulted in the repair and reopening of 385 of Kosovo’s damaged school buildings – more than a third of the total. But Bellamy said overall prospects for children of the Balkan region remained in doubt, citing violations of child rights ranging from repression and violence to displacement and economic recession. A year after the NATO bombing of Kosovo began, UNICEF said that:
"A year later the environment for children is troubling, particularly in Yugoslavia, but throughout the region," Bellamy said. "Children need peace and a sense of security in order to develop to the fullest of their potential. Real peace is what is lacking in the region right now – we hope that will change." |
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| Please email media@unicef.org with comments or requests for more information, quoting CF/DOC/PR/2000/22 |
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