The week in children's rights - 1545

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23 August 2017 subscribe | subscribe | submit information
  • In this issue:

    Latest news and reports
    - Armed conflict and refugees
    - Violence, neglect and accountability
    - Child marriage and sexual abuse
    - Health 

    Upcoming events 

    Employment

    LATEST NEWS AND REPORTS


    Armed conflict and refugees

    A report leaked from the office of a top UN official has recommended Saudi Arabia should be placed back on the list of countries that kill and maim children in war. The document, a draft of the UN Secretary-General’s latest report to the Security Council on children and armed conflict, revealed that the Saudi-led military coalition conducting airstrikes in Yemen committed many “grave violations” of children’s rights last year, killing 502 and injuring 838 under-18s. The leaked report explained that attacks carried out by air were the cause of more than half of all child casualties, with at least 349 children killed and 333 others injured in airstrikes. The Special Representative of the Secretary-General on children and armed conflict, Virginia Gamba, was the chief author of the report, but the final decision on whether or not Saudi Arabia goes onto the so-called “list of shame” will be made by UN Secretary-General António Guterres himself. Civil society groups have already called on Guterres to put Saudi Arabia back on the list, arguing that it was only removed from last year’s report due to the exertion of political pressure.

    Children, particularly girls, are increasingly being used as “human bombs” in North Eastern Nigeria. According to UNICEF, so far this year, there have been four times as many incidents of children being used in this way to carry out terror attacks as there were in all of 2016. Since 1 January 2017, at least 83 children have been used in bomb attacks; 55 were girls, most often under 15 years old, 27 were boys, and one was a baby strapped to a girl. UNICEF emphasised that children used as “human bombs” are victims, not perpetrators, but noted that the armed group Boko Haram was using children in such attacks knowing that it will create further fear and suspicion of those children who manage to escape the group. The attacks are also taking place at the same time as a displacement and malnutrition crisis, with as many as 450,000 children at risk of severe acute malnutrition this year.

    A dramatic rise in violence has been recorded in the Central African Republic, with international observers concerned that the world is no longer paying attention. UNICEF estimates that almost one in five of the country’s citizens are now either internally displaced or living outside of the country due to recent violence. Beyond the capital, Bangui, it is estimated that as much as two thirds of the country is currently controlled by armed groups. Schools are closed in many regions affected by violence, most NGOs providing health care have left the country, and the deliberate targeting of civilians, particularly children, has been reported in recent months. While there has been little fighting between armed groups, children are reportedly still being recruited, sexually abused, and killed by fighters on all sides. As of the end of July, UNICEF's US$46.3 million humanitarian appeal for CAR children was 42 percent funded.
     

    Violence, neglect and accountability

    Three police officers have been suspended in the Philippines after a 17-year-old was fatally shot during a supposed ‘drug operation’. The victim, Kian Loyd delos Santos, was found dead in an alley, with forensic evidence revealing that he had been shot in the back of the head and through the ears while lying on the floor. This information directly contradicts the initial police report which claimed Kian had resisted arrest. A high-ranking officer was quick to blame Kian’s family, claiming the child was not innocent, and that his father was “a former drug personality”. Combined with CCTV evidence which seemed to show the boy being dragged into an alleyway, it is highly likely that the incident represents another instance of extra-judicial killing by police in the country as part of President Duterte’s ongoing “war on drugs”. The police chief of the district where the killing occurred has also been relieved of his office, though the move has done little to quell the chorus of condemnation from those opposed to Duterte’s brutal campaign against those perceived to be involved in the drug trade. On 24 August the Philippines’ Senate Committee on Public Order and Dangerous Drugs will conduct a hearing on police accountability for the killing.

    Several ex-officials are to stand trial in Guatemala in connection with the deaths of 41 girls in a fire at a state-run home for children. Former social welfare secretary Carlos Rodas and deputy secretary Anahi Keller were arrested on 13 March and now face charges of mistreating minors, dereliction of duty, abuse of authority and manslaughter. Former home director Santos Torres will be tried on similar charges. The fire broke out on 8 March this year, with all of the girls allegedly locked inside a room, dying as a result of burns and smoke inhalation. The day before the deadly fire several residents had escaped the home, claiming to have suffered abuse at the facility. Allegations of children being trafficked for sexual abuse, serious violence against residents and poor living conditions are now being investigated. All three of the adults charged in relation to the deaths have claimed they are innocent, and say they fulfilled the duties of their positions. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights recently issued a statement claiming that similar reports of rights abuses in Guatemala’s institutions represented a “failed system of child protection”.

    At least 209 children have been released from prisons in Lagos state, Nigeria, after a judge found children being detained with adults in extremely poor conditions. Lagos State Chief Judge, Justice Olufunmilayo Atilade, was alerted to large numbers of children being detained for minor offences, and upon inspecting several prisons found “scores of disease-ravaged minors”.  Some of the children detained in these prisons reportedly died before the visit, as a result of worsening sanitary conditions, poor welfare and overcrowding. In one prison, which has the capacity to house 1,700 inmates, around 3,100 detainees were awaiting trial, with 723 more serving sentences. Many of the children are believed to have been arrested for “hawking”, or selling goods on the street, while others had been charged for illegally crossing roads. While hawking was officially banned in 2003 it was only sparingly policed until last year, resulting in a spike in arrests since June 2016.


    Child marriage and sexual abuse

    Lebanon has repealed a law that allowed rapists to escape punishment by marrying their victims. Lebanese NGO Abaad campaigned against the law, known as article 522, for more than a year, including with public campaigns to raise awareness, such as with billboards of women in bloodied and torn wedding gowns with the caption: “A white dress does not cover the rape”. Jordan and Tunisia recently repealed similar laws, and rights groups hope the momentum will influence other Arab countries with similar provisions, including Bahrain, Iraq, Kuwait and Syria to follow suit. Some countries in the region have closed similar loopholes - Egypt repealed a similar law in 1999, and Morocco did the same in 2014 after the suicide of a 16-year-old girl and the attempted suicide of a 15-year-old, both of whom had been forced to marry their rapists.

    El Salvador and Guatemala have passed legislation outlawing marriage with minors, including in cases of pregnancy or when parental consent is given. In El Salvador in 2015, there were 22,361 children between the ages of 12 and 17 who had married or lived in a common-law relationship. Zaira Navas, director of El Salvador’s National Council on Childhood and Adolescence, said the previous law had allowed adults to avoid legal charges for sexual assault through marriage. Notably, El Salvador was among the countries that committed to end child marriage by 2030 under the 2016 Sustainable Development Goals. Meanwhile, the legislation in Guatemala eliminates a provision that allows judges to authorise marriages between adults and children aged 16 years old and above. In July, Honduras’ legislature also unanimously passed a bill prohibiting the marriage of anyone younger than 18 even with parental consent or in cases involving pregnancy.

    A 10-year-old girl who fell pregnant after being raped but was denied an abortion by India's highest court has given birth in hospital. The girl had been raped by an uncle who is now under arrest, and the pregnancy was discovered after 30 weeks, when the child was taken to hospital last month after complaining of stomach pains. A local court refused to grant the child an abortion, saying it was too risky at such a late stage. A plea in the Supreme Court was dismissed for the same reason on 28 July, arguing that Indian law prohibits terminations at more than 20 weeks unless the mother's life is in danger or there are other exceptional circumstances. As many as 10,854 cases of child rape were reported in India in 2015, according to the National Crime Records Bureau. Sexual violence against children still remains a taboo topic, despite a rise in awareness reporting of sexual violence against women and girls since the fatal gang-rape of a student in New Delhi in 2012.

     

    Health

    A child has died in Palestine after swimming in the sea at Gaza City beach, according to a local NGO. According to the boy’s family, his transfer to a hospital in Ramallah for treatment was delayed by a week, during which time his condition deteriorated until he died. After the boy was admitted to hospital he is reported to have died of Ekiri syndrome, which caused lethal toxic encephalopathy, most often a result of prolonged exposure to toxic substances. Last month, an environmental survey found that 73 percent of Gaza’s coastline is dangerously polluted with sewage. The crisis has been caused by a decade-long blockade of Gaza by Israel, contributing to power shutoffs for the whole strip including water and waste management infrastructure. With electricity to lagoons, treatment works and sewage pumps cut off, Gaza’s waste managers have been forced to choose between allowing cities to flood or letting raw sewage escape the overflows into the sea, where many children are known to swim.

    A young man in China has died after being sent to a treatment centre for internet addiction, sparking criticism of similar institutions housing children. The 18-year-old was admitted to a “bootcamp” for gaming and internet addiction by his parents but was rushed to hospital two days later, where he subsequently died. The precise cause of death is unknown, but doctors who examined the body reported that the boy had sustained more than 20 external injuries as well as internal injuries. The director of the centre as well as four other members of staff have been arrested in relation to the death. Bootcamps to treat internet addiction have grown in number in recent years and remain popular despite reports of abusive treatment, beatings and electroshock therapy. Chinese authorities have begun to regulate these facilities and published a draft law earlier this year that would ban the abusive treatment of children, including the use of electroshock therapy, to treat internet addiction.

    The Supreme Court of Chile has approved a bill to legalise abortion in some instances. The bill was passed by lawmakers earlier this month, but faced a challenge before the courts, with some claiming that it violates the right to life. The bill will now enter into force, allowing women to gain access to abortions in cases of rape, where their life is at risk and where the foetus is not expected to survive the pregnancy. An absolute ban on abortions has been in the place since 1989, when it was introduced by the Pinochet regime, with women and doctors being liable to up to five years’ imprisonment if they were found to have breached the law. Despite the penalties, an estimated 70,000 women undergo illegal abortions in the country every year. Chile is the last country in South America to end its complete ban on abortion, though worldwide six majority Catholic countries retain absolute bans: Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Malta, the Dominican Republic and the Vatican.

     
     

    UPCOMING EVENTS

    Education: Child Safeguarding
    Organisation: HREA
    Dates: 30 August-10 October 2017
    Location: Online

    Witchcraft and Human Rights: Expert Workshop
    Organisation: The Witchcraft and Human Rights Information Network
    Dates: 21-22 September 2017
    Location: Geneva, Switzerland

    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

    Health and nutrition: Sion’s 19th International Seminar
    Organisation: International Institute for the Rights of the Child
    Dates: 9-11 October 2017
    Location: Sion, Switzerland

    Education: Child Rights Public Budgeting
    Organisation: HREA
    Dates: 18 October-1 November 2017
    Location: Online

    Education: Child Rights Situation Analysis
    Organisation: HREA
    Dates: 1 November-12 December 2017
    Location: Online
     

     

    EMPLOYMENT

    IJJO: Curriculum developer (Online course on diversion in juvenile justice and children’s rights)
    Application deadline: 25 August 2017
    Location: Online

    IJJO: Project Manager
    Application deadline: 27 August 2017
    Location: Brussels, Belgium

    IJJO: Policy and Project Assistant
    Application deadline: 27 August 2017
    Location: Brussels, Belgium

     

    THE LAST WORD

    Authorities in Saudi Arabia flexed their muscles this week by arresting a 14-year-old who was witnessed dancing the Macarena in public. Police took barely three days to arrest the boy after a video was tweeted of his moves, and he is now being questioned for “improper public behaviour”. However, some have claimed that the video was first posted in 2016, suggesting unchecked fun could have been enjoyed by the child for more than a year without police interference.

    We would assume that the police have better things to do than arrest a child for stepping out of line in this way, but this isn’t the first time authorities have put their foot down on dance moves, with “dabbing”  also being singled out as criminal earlier this year. It’s probably safe to assume that Gangnam Style, The Ketchup Song and twerking are also no-gos.
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