|
UN
Secretary-General's
Study
Reveals
Full Range and Scale of Violence Against Children
Monday
16th October
2006
New York,
12 October 2006
Much
violence against children remains hidden and is often
socially approved, according to the United Nations
Secretary-General’s Study on Violence against Children
presented yesterday to the UN General Assembly. For the
first time, a single document provides a comprehensive
global view of the range and scale of violence against
children.
Violence
against children includes physical violence, psychological
violence, discrimination, neglect and maltreatment. It
ranges from sexual abuse in the home to corporal and
humiliating punishment at school; from the use of physical
restraints in children’s homes to brutality at the hands of
law enforcement officers; from abuse and neglect in
institutions to gang warfare on the streets where children
play or work; from infanticide to so-called ‘honour’
killing.
“The best
way to deal with violence against children is to stop it
before it happens,” says Professor Paulo Sergio Pinherio,
the Independent Expert appointed by the Secretary-General to
lead the study. “Everyone has a role to play in this, but
States must take the primary responsibility. That means
prohibiting all kinds of violence against children, wherever
it occurs and whoever is the perpetrator, and investing in
prevention programmes to address the underlying causes.
People must be held accountable for their actions but a
strong legal framework is not only about sanctions, it is
about sending a robust, unequivocal signal that society just
will not accept violence against children.”
The Study,
which combines human rights, public health and child
protection perspectives, focuses on five ‘settings’ where
violence occurs: the home and family, schools and
educational settings, institutions (care and judicial), the
workplace, and the community.
Extreme
violence against children may hit the headlines but the
study concludes that for many children violence is routine,
a part of their daily reality.
Although
much violence remains hidden or unreported, and figures
therefore often underestimate the scope of the problem, the
statistics in the report reveal a starting picture.
For
example;
In 2002,
the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that some
53,000 children aged 0-17 died as a result of homicide;
According
to the International Labor Office’s (ILO) latest estimates,
5.7 million children were in forced or bonded labour, 1.8
million in prostitution and pornography, and 1.2 million
were victims of trafficking in 2000.
In 16
developing countries reviewed by a Global School-Based
Health Survey, the percentage of school-aged children that
reported having been verbally or physically bullied at
school in the previous 30 days ranged from 20 per cent in
some countries to as much as 65 per cent in other;
According
to the Study, children in detention are frequently subjected
to violence by staff, including as a form of control or
punishment, often for minor infractions. In 77 countries,
corporal and other violent punishments are accepted as legal
disciplinary measures in penal institutions.
Although
the consequences may vary according to the nature and
severity of the violence inflicted, the short-and long-term
repercussions for children are very often grave and
damaging. The physical, emotional and psychological scars of
violence can have severe implications for a child’s
development, health and ability to learn. Studies have shown
that experiencing violence in childhood is strongly
associated with health risk behaviours later in life such as
smoking, alcohol and drug abuse, physical inactivity and
obesity. In turn, these behaviours contribute to some of the
leading causes of disease and death, including cancers,
depression, suicide and cardiovascular disorders.
“No matter
whether it occurs in the family, school, community,
institution or workplace, health workers are the front line
for responding to violence against children,” says Dr Anders
Nordstrom, WHO acting Director-General. “We must make our
contribution to ensuring that children receive the best
possible services to reduce its harmful effects. States
should pursue evidence-based policies and programmes which
address factors that give rise to such violence, and ensure
that resources are allocated to address its underlying
causes and monitor the response to these efforts.”
“Violence
against children is a violation of their human rights, a
disturbing reality of our societies,” sys Louse Arbour,
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. “It can
never be justified whether for disciplinary reasons or
cultural tradition. No such thing as a ‘reasonable’ of
violence is acceptable. Legalized violence against children
in one context risks tolerance of violence against children
generally.
“Violence
has a lasting affect not just on children and their
families, but also on communities and nations,” says UNICEF
Executive Director Ann M. Veneman. “We welcome this
comprehensive study on the impact of violence against
children,”
The report
to the General Assembly calls for a wide range of actions to
be taken to prevent and respond to violence against children
across all the settings where it occurs. Twelve overarching
recommendations address areas such as national strategies
and systems, data collection and ensuring accountability.
At a global
level, the report calls for the appointment of a Special
Representative on Violence against Children, with an initial
mandate of four years, to act as a high-profile global
advocate to promote prevention and elimination of all
violence against children and to encourage cooperation and
follow-up.
About the
United Nations Secretary-General’s Study on Violence against
Children
In 2001 the
General Assembly requested the secretary-General to conduct
an in-depth study on the question of violence against
children’. In dependent Expert Professor Paulo Sergio
Pinheiro was later appointed to lead the Study, in
collaboration with the Office of the High Commissioner for
Human Rights (OHCHR), the United Nations Children’s Fund
(UNICEF) and the World Health Organization (WHO).
|