The week in children's rights - 1541

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27 July 2017 subscribe | subscribe | submit information
  • In this issue:

    Latest news and reports
    - Bodily integrity and health
    - Armed conflict
    - Juvenile justice
    - Sexual abuse
    - Education and privatisation

    Upcoming events

    Employment

    LATEST NEWS AND REPORTS


    Bodily integrity and health

     

    Intersex children in the United States continue to be subjected to medically unnecessary surgeries that can inflict irreversible physical and psychological harm on them, according to a new report by Human Rights Watch and interACT. The report found that many doctors still operate on intersex children’s gonads, internal sex organs and genitals when they are too young to participate in the decision, and where the surgeries could be safely deferred. The consequences of surgery, most often carried out to assign a child a binary sex at birth, can amount to sterilisation without the patient’s consent, may risk incontinence, scarring, lack of sensation, and psychological trauma, with many of the effects being irreversible. Despite growing recognition of the harm such operations cause, the report found uneven and inadequate standards of care and highlighted disagreements amongst practitioners about how best to respect and protect the rights of intersex patients. The report recommends that the US government and medical bodies outlaw all surgical procedures that seek to alter the gonads, genitals, or internal sex organs of children with atypical sex characteristics too young to participate in the decision, when those procedures carry a meaningful risk of harm and can be safely deferred. The American Academy of Pediatrics has since issued an initial statementnoting the importance of engaging in “open and transparent conversations” about proposed treatment and alternatives for intersex children.

    A new law aimed at controlling children’s exposure to harmful chemicalsand heavy metals in toys has entered into force in Nepal. Under the new Mandatory Toys Standard (MTS), the Ministry of Population and Environment has limited the maximum value of a dozen chemicals which may be present in children’s toys. Concerns have been rising about the continued exposure of children to toys containing these toxic chemicals, potentially harming their physical, mental and intellectual development. A study conducted by the Center for Public Health and Environmental Development in 2013 looked at a sample of 100 toys collected from different parts of the Kathmandu Valley and found that 54 contained levels of toxic heavy metals including lead, mercury, cadmium, chromium and bromine far higher than permissible limits set out in international standards. The new mandatory standard includes a broad definition of children’s toys, and local bodies have been ordered to prevent the import, production, sale, storage and distribution of toys that contain toxic chemicals and heavy metals exceeding the limits prescribed by the MTS.

    The parents of Charlie Gard, an 11-month-old child from the United Kingdom who suffers from an extremely rare, currently incurable condition, have ended their legal challenge to take him abroad for experimental treatment. Their case centred around a disagreement with doctors over whether the child should undergo experimental therapy in the United States. Doctors were of the opinion that Charlie’s brain was irreversibly damaged and that therapy would be futile. The case was brought to the High Court, which determined that the experimental treatment would have no “effective benefit” and could even subject Charlie to pain and suffering. The trial judge held that treatment would not be in Charlie’s best interests and gave permission to the doctors to withdraw Charlie’s ventilation and artificial nutrition and hydration. Charlie’s parents appealed, unsuccessfully, to the UK’s Supreme Court and to the European Court of Human Rights, arguing that the test should not be whether treatment was in the child’s best interests but rather, whether the treatment is likely to cause “significant harm”. Both courts rejected this argument, noting the international consensus that the child’s best interests is the most important factor. The case received widespread international attention, and it came to light in the final court appearances that the doctor who offered to carry out the experimental treatment had not previously examined Charlie or examined his brain scans, and had a financial interest in the treatment he planned to prescribe.

     

    Armed conflict

    Sexual violence in South Sudan’s civil war is being carried out on a “massive scale” with civilians, including children, witnessing or being subjected to gang rape, beatings and torture. A new Amnesty International report details how men, women and children have been subjected to sexual assault, torture and humiliation, both by government and opposition forces since December 2013. The research draws on interviews with 168 survivors, 124 of whom reported that they were either raped or gang raped during the conflict, with most reporting that sexual violence was used systematically during attacks on their communities to humiliate and assert control over victims. Targets were often chosen on the basis of which ethnic minority they belonged to. South Sudan's government has condemned sexual assaults, promising that "the government is moving swiftly to protect civilians from such behaviour by educating all armed forces and holding perpetrators accountable," but victims have claimed that there is total impunity for perpetrators and little in the way of medical or psychological help for survivors.

    Children in Central African Republic (CAR) are increasingly being targeted for murder, rape and recruitment into armed groups as renewed fighting takes its toll on the country’s civilians. UNICEF has warned that months of conflict have led to an “increasing number of violent acts” targeting the youngest members of the population, amounting to “flagrant violations of children’s rights”. The violence, which has escalated since French peacekeepers left the country last year, has led to many civilians fleeing to neighbouring countries. As many as 103,000 refugees from CAR are now registered with the UN Refugee Agency in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and experts have warned that if the situation continues to deteriorate resources will quickly run out. Speaking to reporters in Bangui, UN Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, Stephen O’Brien, said that the UN’s Humanitarian Response Plan was only 24 percent funded, requiring a total of $497 million.

    The UN has been urged by several charities to include Saudi Arabia on its annual list of countries that have committed grave violations of children’s rights in conflict. The country was previously placed on the list, compiled annually by the UN Secretary-General, but later removed in 2016 after allegedly exerting political pressure on the UN. A briefing by Save the Children and Watchlist on Children and Armed Conflict said that the Saudi-led coalition, currently taking part in the conflict in Yemen, committed “grave violations against children” in 23 attacks in 2016, bombing hospitals, schools and other civilian targets. The briefing details how 4,000 children have been either killed or injured in the conflict, while destruction of health facilities and water infrastructure have contributed to an ongoing cholera epidemic, now confirmed to be the worst recorded so far in human history. The United States and the United Kingdom are also implicated in the conflict, with the US approving more than $20 billion in military sales to Saudi Arabia in 2015, and the UK approving £283 million worth of arms sales to the country after an airstrike on a Yemeni funeral which killed 140 people.


    Juvenile justice


    At least two young men are at risk of imminent execution in Saudi Arabiafor offences they allegedly committed while they were children. Mujtaiba Sweikat and Salman Qureshi were 17 years old when they were convicted of offences related to protests they allegedly participated in. A further 12 adults are also at risk of execution in relation to the same protests, with the Supreme Court now having confirmed that all 14 will be put to death unless they are granted a royal pardon. Reprieve, a British NGO, reports that the men were subjected to unfair trials involving prolonged pretrial detention, denial of access to a lawyer and  “confessions” extracted under torture. These are not the first cases of child offenders being sentenced to death for offences related to protests in the country. Ali al-Nimr, Dawood al-Marhoon and Abdullah al-Zaher have been on death row since 2012 after they were arrested and sentenced to death for protest-related offences. For more information on the legality of the death penalty for children in Saudi Arabia, see our inhuman sentencing campaign report on the country.

    Not a single detention facility in England and Wales assessed by the Chief Inspector of Prisons was safe to hold children and young people, according to a new report. The annual review found a rapid increase in violence affecting children in detention. The rate of self-harm among children who are detained has more than doubled over five years and the rate at which children experienced violent assaults in detention has increased at a similar rate. The report also recorded examples of staff using pain-inducing techniques and strip-searching restrained children. Commenting on the report, Frances Crook of the Howard League for Penal Reform called for change: “Prisons for children should be closed forthwith. For decades, children have been subjected to abuse and neglect by the state. Now the official watchdog has confirmed … there is not a single prison in the country where a child is safe.”

     
    Sexual abuse

    At least 547 members of a prestigious Catholic boys' choir in Germany were physically or sexually abused between 1945 and 1992, according to a recent report. Allegations involving the Domspatzen choir in Regensburg, which was run for 30 years by Pope Benedict XVI's elder brother, were among a spate of revelations of abuse by Roman Catholic clergy in Germany. The report said that 547 boys at the Domspatzen's school "with a high degree of plausibility" were victims of physical or sexual abuse, or both. It counted 500 cases of physical violence and 67 of sexual violence, committed by a total of 49 perpetrators. At the choir's pre-school, "violence, fear and helplessness dominated" and "violence was an everyday method", according to the report’s findings. The choir was led from 1964 to 1994 by Pope Benedict's brother, the Reverend Georg Ratzinger. Ratzinger has acknowledged slapping pupils after he took over the choir, though such punishments were commonplace in Germany at that time. He also said he was aware of allegations of physical abuse at the elementary school and did nothing about it, but claimed he was not aware of sexual abuse.

    In the United Kingdom, child victims of sexual exploitation are being refused compensation from a UK government agency on the grounds they "consented", according to campaigners. A coalition of charities, including Barnardo's and Victim Support, has highlighted the need for an urgent review of the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority's guidelines. The charities argue that the rules do not reflect the fact the legal age of consent is 16, as children as young as 12 have reportedly been denied payments, even after their attackers have been jailed. The charities say the rules should be changed "so no child groomed and manipulated into sexual abuse is denied compensation because they complied with their abuse through fear, lack of understanding, or being brainwashed into believing their abuser loved them". According to a Freedom of Information request, 693 child victims of sexual abuse have been refused compensation since 2012. The issue of compensation for victims is currently being examined by the ongoing independent inquiry into child sexual abuse.
     
     

    Education and privatisation


    In India, a regional government committee tasked with recommending ways to improve education among religious minorities has suggested an increase in the number of segregated schools. Despite recent legislation stipulating that the education system must be open and accessible to children from every background, caste, religion and ability, separate schools for children from marginalised communities are becoming more prevalent. Many education activists believe segregation is creating educational ‘ghettos’ and institutionalising exclusion. “Schools must be diverse and accessible to all,” said Ambarish Rai, convener of the Right to Education Forum. While some argue marginalised communities need the safety of institutions where they form the majority, in the long-term, this can have serious negative consequences. “The school is often the only place where children from different communities can interact with each other,” said Geetha Nambissan from Jawaharlal Nehru University. “It can help instil values of equality and fraternity. In this country, communities are already separated and religion is especially divisive. A separate system is not an equal one.”

    More than 90 percent of public school educators in Australia are concerned about the privatisation of state-run education, including the ethics of private companies, according to a new report by the New South Wales Teachers Federation (NSWTF). The study, which involved 2,200 teachers and principals from across the country, raises concerns about the increasing commercialisation of schooling in the country. The majority of respondents argued against commercialisation, or at least expressed concern about the quality of commercial products and services. The report also notes that the “reduced capacity of the state” in education, due to increased reliance on private companies to design curriculum programmes, textbooks and standardised testing, has opened up spaces and opportunities for so-called edu-businesses to expand their role in schools and schooling systems, principally on a for-profit basis. “Why is education such easy prey?” said NSWTF president, Maurie Mulheron, “Because everyone has to send their children to schools. Schools are always there – it’s a gravy train for life.”
     
     

    UPCOMING EVENTS

    Child abuse: ISPCAN European conference on child abuse & neglect
    Organisation: International Society for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect
    Dates: 1-4 October 2017
    Location: The Hague, Netherlands

    Disability: Pacific Rim Int'l Conference on Disability & Diversity
    Organisation: Center on Disability Studies
    Date: 9-11 October 2017
    Location: Honolulu, United States
     

     

    EMPLOYMENT

     

    War Child: Middle East Regional Education Advisor
    Application deadline: 5 August 2017
    Location: Jordan, Lebanon or Palestine

     

    LEAK OF THE WEEK

    Russia’s consumer watchdog, Rospotrebnadzor, recently lashed out against fidget spinners, claiming that the twirling toys could be an “instrument for zombifying” children or a “form of hypnosis” used by the political opposition. The watchdog has claimed it would ask for scientific studies to be carried out on the toys and warned those buying them to check them for chemical smells in a fearmongering state television broadcast.

    Not long after this the head of the organisation also made another statement aimed at children which seemed to attract less attention. Anna Popova, the head of Rospotrebnadzor, revealed at a youth forum that 854,187 Russians are now registered as living with HIV, also claiming that drug addiction was the country’s second epidemic. Public health issues in Russia are certainly a concern, but we would suggest that two of these issues are worth addressing, and the other is just spin. 
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