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UNICEF Nigerias Acting Representative Pernille Ironside
Children continue to pay
a deadly price as conflicts rage around the world, including in Nigeria’s
North-East, UNICEF said this on Monday, December 30, 2019.
Since the start of the
decade, the United Nations has verified more than 170,000 grave violations
against children in conflict – the equivalent of more than 45 violations every
day for the last 10 years. In Nigeria’s North-East, the figure is almost 20,000
in the last seven years.
“Ten years of conflict
in Nigeria’s north-east – closely coinciding with the decade about to end – has
seen a massive level of violations against Nigeria’s children in the region.
“These include killings,
maiming, abductions, rape, severe psychological trauma, and extreme disruption
of their education – leaving them vulnerable possibly for the rest of their
lives,” said Pernille Ironside, UNICEF Nigeria’s Acting Representative.
“Children should never
be a target in any armed conflict – and everything must be done to protect
children when they find themselves in areas of conflict. Sadly, this has too
often not been the case during the conflict in north-east Nigeria, with
children paying the heaviest price for the ongoing crisis.”
Beyond Nigeria, the
number of countries experiencing conflict is the highest it has been since the
adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1989, with dozens of
violent armed conflicts killing and maiming children and forcing them from
their homes.
“Conflicts around the
world are lasting longer, causing more bloodshed and claiming more young
lives,” said Henrietta Fore, UNICEF’s Executive Director. “Attacks on children
continue unabated as warring parties flout one of the most basic rules of war:
the protection of children. For every act of violence against children that
creates headlines and cries of outrage, there are many more that go
unreported.”
In 2018, the UN verified
more than 24,000 grave violations against children globally, including killing,
maiming, sexual violence, abductions, denial of humanitarian access, child
recruitment and attacks on schools and hospitals. While monitoring and
reporting efforts have been strengthened, this number is more than
two-and-a-half times higher than that recorded in 2010.
More than 12,000
children were killed or maimed globally in 2018 – almost 800 of them in
Nigeria’s North-East.
Globally, continued,
widespread use of airstrikes and explosive weapons such as landmines, mortars,
improvised explosive devices, rocket attacks, cluster munitions and artillery
shelling cause the vast majority of child casualties in armed conflict.
Attacks and violence
against children have not let up throughout 2019. During the first half of the
year, the UN has verified over 10,000 such violations against children –
although actual numbers are likely to be much higher. This number is close to
200 children in Nigeria’s North-East crisis.
UNICEF called on “all
warring parties, including in Nigeria, to abide by their obligations under
international law and to immediately end violations against children and the
targeting of civilian infrastructure, including schools, hospitals and water
infrastructure.”

















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