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Security council debates issue of children in war

Wednesday 26 July 2000: UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy today called on the UN Security Council to ensure that all those who violate children's rights in times of war -- whether governments, rebel groups or corporations -- are held accountable.

Recent press releases and statements on child soldiers

"We have far too often said that we will not permit children to be raped, mutilated, recruited, hurt and forced to lose their childhood," Ms. Bellamy told the UN Security Council today. "Yet time and time again we have stood and watched helplessly -- in Rwanda, in Sierra Leone, in Sudan, in Afghanistan, in Kosovo and East Timor -- while cruelty and indifference prevailed."

Ms. Bellamy spoke to a special Security Council session which is considering the issue of children and armed conflict following a report by the Secretary-General released last Friday. The Council is expected to pass a new resolution on the issue next week.

Ms. Bellamy welcomed the Security Council's attention to this issue for the second time in one year, placing children high on the political agenda of the UN. However, she emphasized that a resolution would only make a difference to the lives of children if it was strictly monitored and enforced. She called on the Council to monitor the behaviour of States and others and ensure that child rights violators are shamed, disgraced and held accountable for their actions.

"Where warring parties or others violate the provisions of any resolution, UNICEF urges Council Members to speak out, collectively and individually, to make it clear that violators are overstepping the bounds of acceptable behaviour," she said.

Ms. Bellamy asked that the resolution include a range of critical interventions to assist and protect children, such as the rapid restart of education programmes to help restore hope and a sense of normality for traumatized children, as well as to reduce the chance of recruitment of child soldiers. She also urged the Council to stress the need for special demobilization programmes for child soldiers, landmines awareness programmes, and the protection of hospitals, schools and other sites where children are likely to be found.

UNICEF estimates that more than two million children have died as a result of war in the last decade and another 12 million have been left homeless. Landmines kill or injure as many as 500 children each month. At least 300,000 children under 18 are involved in over 30 armed conflicts worldwide, as child soldiers, porters, messengers, cooks and sex slaves. All children in affected societies suffer from the direct and indirect consequences of war.

Ms. Bellamy said she was encouraged by progress since the Security Council adopted its first resolution (Res. 1261) on children in conflict a year ago. She applauded the Optional Protocol to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), adopted by the General Assembly in May, which raises the minimum age for compulsory recruitment into the armed forces from 15 to 18 years. Ms. Bellamy urged governments to ratify the Optional Protocol as quickly as possible, and noted that the UN Millennium Summit in New York offered an opportunity to do so.

Highlighting the international focus on children in conflict this year, Ms. Bellamy noted the International Conference on War-Affected Children to be held in Winnipeg, Canada, in September. She also noted groundbreaking commitments to protect children in war made at recent OSCE and ECOWAS meetings.

Ms. Bellamy told the Security Council: "We cannot ask war-affected children to wait any longer for their rights to be respected. Developing minds and bodies require attention now. Childhood is finite and, once lost, irreplaceable."

UNICEF is helping in over 25 war-affected countries to restart schools, supply drugs and vaccines, reunite children with their families, operate clinics and hospitals, support traumatized children, dig wells, campaign against child recruitment, and promote demobilization and disarmament.

Also see:

 

UNICEF urges demobilization/reintergration of child soldiers Tues. 29 Oct.
UNICEF negotiates with LTTE for recruited children Thurs.20 June
UNICEF calls for release of child soldiers by LRA Tues. 5 Mar
UNICEF hails new treaty banning child soldiers Tues. 12 Feb. 2002

2001


Ex-child soldier addresses Security Council Tues., 20 Nov
UN leaders hail new step banning children as soldiers Tues.20 Nov
Five months later, child soldiers go home to Sudan, Wed., 29 August
Ex-child soldiers begin new lives in Rwanda Mon, 20 August
Sri Lankan children still recruited for wars Friday, 20 July
Sierra Leone releases 150 more child soldiers Monday, 4 June
Côte d'Ivoire intercepts child soldiers from Burkina Faso June
In Angola children released, but worry persists Sat, 26 May
Hundreds of child soldiers freed in Sierra Leone
Friday, 25 May 20
In Angola, a call for release of 60 abducted children Tues., 8 May
UNICEF renews aid for children in Sierra Leone Thurs , 19 April
Carol Bellamy on the airlift of child soldiers in Sudan Tues, 27 Feb
2,500 demobilized child soldiers out of Sudan
Tuesday, 27 Feb
UNICEF finds 163 Congolese child soldiers in Uganda
Tuesday, 20 Feb
UNICEF assesses Congolese child soldiers in Uganda Wed, 14 Feb
UNICEF applauds agreement with Uganda on child soldiers Fri, 9 Feb
Children in armed conflict to the Panel on Optional Protocol Wed., 31 Jan
Security council debates issue of children in war
Wed, 26 July
Angola: Call for immediate release of 21 abducted children Fri, 14 July

2000

Sudan rebels give UNICEF a guarantee on child soldiers, Oct 24
Bellamy in Winnipeg on war-effected children
Wed, 13 Sept
Graça Michel calls for an end to impunity against war crimes Wed., 13 Sept
UNICEF hails new Security Council decision on children and war Fri, 11 Aug
Bellamy to Security Council on protection of children in conflict Wed, 26 July
Hague Appeal for Peace: Children as catalysts for peace Wed., 12 May

1999

To the Humanitarian Issues Working Group: the catastrophe in Kosovo Tues. 6 Apr
To the Security Council: A peace and security agenda for children Fri., 12 Feb

please email media@unicef.org with comments or requests for more information, quoting CF/DOC/PR/2000/59