Current:Home > InvestMore children than ever displaced and at risk of violence and exploitation, U.N. warns-LoTradeCoin
More children than ever displaced and at risk of violence and exploitation, U.N. warns
View Date:2024-12-24 03:23:38
United Nations — War, poverty and climate change have created a perfect storm for children around the world, a United Nations report warned Wednesday. The confluence of crises and disasters has driven the number of children currently displaced from their homes to an unprecedented 42 million, and it has left those young people vulnerable to criminal violence and exploitation.
The report, Protecting the Rights of Children on the Move in Times of Crisis, compiled by seven separate U.N. agencies that deal with children, concludes that of the "staggering" 100 million civilians forcibly displaced around the world by the middle of last year, 41% of those "on the move" were children — more than ever previously documented.
"These children are exposed to heightened risk of violence," warns the U.N.'s Office of Drugs and Crime, one of the contributing agencies. "This includes sexual abuse and exploitation, forced labor, trafficking, child marriage, illegal/illicit adoption, recruitment by criminal and armed groups (including terrorist groups) and deprivation of liberty."
"Children on the move are children, first and foremost, and their rights move with them," the lead advocate of the joint report, Dr. Najat Maalla M'jid, the U.N.'s Special Representative on Violence against Children, told CBS News.
The U.N.'s outgoing migration chief, Antonio Vitorino, said many displaced kids "remain invisible to national child protection systems or are caught in bureaucratic nets of lengthy processes of status determination."
The U.N. agencies jointly call in the report for individual nations to invest "in strong rights-based national protection systems that include displaced children, rather than excluding them or creating separate services for them, has proven to be more sustainable and effective in the long-term."
- "Repugnant" U.K. plan to curb illegal migrant arrivals draws U.N. rebuke
Specifically, the U.N. says all children should be granted "nondiscriminatory access to national services — including civil documentation such as birth registration, social welfare, justice, health, education, and social protection," regardless of their migration status, wherever they are.
"Keeping all children safe from harm and promoting their wellbeing with particular attention to those is crisis situations is — and must be — everybody's business," said actress Penelope Cruz, a UNICEF national ambassador in Spain, commenting on the report. "Children must be protected everywhere and in all circumstances."
- In:
- Child Marriage
- slavery
- Child Trafficking
- Sexual Abuse
- United Nations
- Refugee
- Child Abuse
Pamela Falk is the CBS News correspondent covering the United Nations, and an international lawyer.
TwitterveryGood! (91466)
Related
- Kid Rock tells fellow Trump supporters 'most of our left-leaning friends are good people'
- Rio de Janeiro deploys helicopters in extra security after a criminal gang torches 35 buses
- U.S. sending U.S. carrier strike group, additional air defense systems to Persian Gulf
- Six under-the-radar NBA MVP candidates you need to keep an eye on in the 2023-24 season
- Bowl projections: SEC teams joins College Football Playoff field
- Massachusetts GOP couple agree to state’s largest settlement after campaign finance investigation
- Kansas City Chiefs WR Justyn Ross arrested on criminal damage charge, not given bond
- Possible motive revealed week after renowned Iranian film director and wife stabbed to death
- Mike Tyson-Jake Paul: How to watch the fight, time, odds
- Britney Spears Details the Heartbreaking Aftermath of Justin Timberlake’s Text Message Breakup
Ranking
- Colts' Kenny Moore II ridicules team's effort in loss to Bills
- Protests across Panama against new contract for Canadian copper mining company in biodiverse north
- California orders Cruise driverless cars off the roads because of safety concerns
- Spain’s acting government to push for a 37½-hour workweek. That’s if it can remain in power
- Brands Our Editors Are Thankful For in 2024
- Georgia babysitter sentenced to life after death of 9-month-old baby, prosecutors say
- Cleveland Browns player's family member gives birth at Lucas Oil Stadium during game
- South Carolina prosecutors want legislators who are lawyers off a judicial screening committee
Recommendation
-
Deommodore Lenoir contract details: 49ers ink DB to $92 million extension
-
Officers shoot armed suspect in break-in who refused to drop gun, chief says
-
Niners' Fred Warner's leaping tackle shows 'tush push' isn't always successful
-
'Let Us Descend' follows a slave on a painful journey — finding some hope on the way
-
Cavaliers' Darius Garland rediscovers joy for basketball under new coach
-
'He's a bad man': Adolis García quiets boos, lifts Rangers to World Series with MVP showing
-
Migrant bus conditions 'disgusting and inhuman,' says former vet who escorted convoys
-
Miners from a rival union hold hundreds of colleagues underground at a gold mine in South Africa