2014 devastating year for children: UN

Globally, 230 million children currently live in countries and areas engulfed in violent conflict


Afp December 09, 2014

UNITED NATIONS: Year 2014 has been a devastating year for children with up to 15 million swept up in wars in the Central African Republic, Iraq, South Sudan, the Palestinian territories, Syria and Ukraine, the UN children's agency said Monday.

"Never in recent memory have so many children been subjected to such unspeakable brutality," Unicef director Anthony Lake said.

"Children have been killed while studying in the classroom and while sleeping in their beds; they have been orphaned, kidnapped, tortured, recruited, raped and even sold as slaves."

"This has been a devastating year for millions of children," he said.

Globally, 230 million children currently live in countries and areas engulfed in violent conflict, according to Unicef.

The wars in Syria and Iraq, which have seen the rise of the Islamic State group, have left children in the clutches of increasingly brutal and extreme violence, the agency said.

More than 7.3 million children are affected by the war in Syria and 2.7 million in Iraq.

In Gaza, 54,000 children remain homeless from the 50-day war between Israel and Hamas militants that ended in August. Of the more than 2,000 dead from the fighting, 538 were children.

Up to 10,000 children have been recruited by armed groups in the Central African Republic over the past year and more than 430 children have been killed and maimed - three times as many as last year.

In South Sudan, which has been engulfed in a year-long war, 235,000 children under five are suffering from severe acute malnutrition, while 750,000 have been displaced and more than 320,000 are living as refugees.

South Sudan armed forces and groups have recruited around 12,000 child soldiers this year, according to Unicef.

The world's worst outbreak of Ebola has left thousands of children orphaned while some 5 million are out of school in the three hardest-hit countries: Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

"The sheer number of crises in 2014 meant that many were quickly forgotten or captured little attention," Unicef said citing ongoing violence in Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Nigeria, Pakistan, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.

COMMENTS (2)

Mansoor | 9 years ago | Reply

This is such a sad news, what future we giving to this children, 230 million disturbed children deprived of their basic rights to have study and have fun? These 230 million will rise up and do same become violent as that is that they have seen..

Citizens of the World its time to over your grudges before its to late.. we have so less time on this planet and all we want to to is ruin it..

I pray to Allah things get better for these children and humans of this planet

aarukhbe | 9 years ago | Reply

These are the kinds of articles we need: objective and factual. If people don't even put their various perspectives in an article, facts are enough for a reader to read. The aim of the birth of media was to deliver facts, not to filter facts.

Very Good! Perhaps the first article that I love in Express Tribune!

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