1. Introduction
1. Armed conflicts in and outside
of Europe regularly focus attention on the plight of children inexorably caught
up in them. They reduce children’s chances of living a safe and
happy childhood and developing in a safe environment in the short
term, prevent them from growing into healthy adults leading fulfilled
lives in the mid term, and put at stake the emergence of stable
States where people can live and work in peace in the long term.
In this respect, the Syrian war has attracted much attention recently,
not least due to its geopolitical implications and the refugee crisis
it has contributed to, the effects of which have been strongly felt
by many neighbouring and European countries.
2. Through the media, this conflict in particular received “a
child’s face”: in 2016, Omran Daqneesh, a five-year-old Syrian boy,
became the symbol of the suffering of people in Aleppo and of all
children affected by war. However, we must not forget that even
within Europe, several regions are still caught up in what may be
called “unresolved conflicts”, “frozen conflicts” or “post-conflict
situations”, often following wars or armed conflicts.
3. The purpose of this report is not to examine individual conflicts
in detail or to blame any of the parties to the conflict, but to
exclusively draw attention to the fate of the children caught up
in such situations. I intend to recall to what extent their daily
lives and healthy development can be affected. For us as parliamentarians, feeling
concerned about children must not stop at expressing our sympathy,
but must lead us to act to effectively protect them, including by
contributing to preventing and resolving armed conflicts wherever
we can, by stepping up protection of children within conflict situations
and by welcoming, caring for and supporting them once they have
left zones of conflict and war. Needless to say the situation of
other vulnerable groups and adults in general deserves equal attention
but falls outside the scope of this specific report.
2. The issue at stake – different
ways in which children are affected by armed conflicts
4. Given their vulnerability,
children are affected by armed conflict in many different ways.
Apart from the life-threatening physical and psychological effects
on child victims, war and conflicts all too often deprive children
of their parents or other caregivers, but also of basic social services,
health care and education, healthy living conditions, water and
food. Children suffer from armed conflicts as witnesses of death
and violence, highly traumatising events that can leave them with
intense feelings of fear and mistrust for the rest of their lives.
Finally, and especially in socio-economic conditions marked by poverty,
social exclusion, unequal opportunities and discrimination, children
and young people, including in Europe, are regularly recruited as fighters
or child soldiers.
2.1. Children affected by war
and fleeing from conflict zones as refugees or internally displaced persons
(IDPs)
5. Recent figures help us understand
the extent to which children are affected by armed conflicts: over 250 000
people have died during the five-year war in Syria, including thousands
of children, according to data published by the United Nations in
2016.
An estimated 11 million Syrians
have fled their homes since the outbreak of the civil war in March
2011. At the end of 2016, 13.5 million were in need of humanitarian assistance
within the country. According to the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR), 4.8 million had fled to Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan,
Egypt and Iraq, and 6.6 million were internally displaced within Syria. At
the same time, about one million had requested asylum in Europe
(with Germany and Sweden being the top receiving countries).
6. Another conflict country regularly appearing in media reports
is Yemen, where children are amongst the first victims of the conflict
that broke out again in March 2015 between an international coalition
backing the president and the Houthi rebel movement.
Already facing widespread poverty,
food insecurity and lack of health services before the conflict,
the country now sees more than 2.2 million people displaced, and
70% of its population in need of some kind of humanitarian assistance.
Close to 4 000 civilians have died as a direct result of the conflict,
including 1 332 children, whilst thousands more are wasting away
because of deprivations caused by the conflict and the cholera outbreak
confirmed by health authorities in October 2016. UNICEF estimates
that more than 460 000 children in Yemen face severe malnutrition,
while 3.3 million children and pregnant or lactating women suffer
from acute malnutrition. The number of out-of-school children has
reached 2 million with another 350 000 more whose schools are closed.
The country’s water and sanitation infrastructure has been ravaged,
posing serious health risks. Facing a serious lack of funding, UNICEF
and other international organisations have had difficulties providing
even the most basic health, education and protection services in
2017.
7. Next to Syria and Yemen, many other countries and parts of
the world are concerned, and Europe should not turn its back on
them. In its 2015 annual report on Children and Armed Conflict,
the United Nations Secretary General referred to specific action
plans being implemented in Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of
Congo, Myanmar, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Yemen and the Philippines.
In this report, the United Nations looked at 20 conflict situations
in 14 countries, and listed numerous conflict parties for five main
human rights violations against children: 1) recruitment and use
of children; 2) killing and maiming of children; 3) rape and other
forms of sexual violence, (4) attacks on schools and hospitals;
and 5) abductions. Children were found to be affected as direct
targets of violent acts against civilians and communities, often
separating them from their families. Many of them were recruited
as child soldiers, then perceived as a security risk and ended up
in detention and prosecution instead of being handed over to civilian
child protection agencies or receiving support for their reintegration
into society.
8. Some of the most recent media reports show once again to the
whole world to what extent children are the victims of armed and
violent conflicts led and fuelled by adults, based on ethnic or
religious differences and intolerances, and from which they have
no chance of escaping: horrible stories are reaching us almost weekly from
Myanmar where innocent children of the Rohingya minority are killed
in what the State authorities classify as a fight against terrorism,
but what appears to be in reality ethnic cleansing.
Since mid-August 2017 alone, more
than 400 000 Rohingya children and families have been reported by
human rights organisations to have fled to Bangladesh.
Children and women are also amongst
the first to suffer in the ongoing fight against Daesh in Iraq where
international child protection agencies warn of extreme danger to
tens of thousands of children as Iraqi and coalition forces launch
an offensive on the Daesh stronghold in the city of Hawija.
The international community needs
to use their influence wherever they can to ensure that such conflicts
come to an end and, in the meantime, ensure that civilians and children
in particular are being protected to the greatest extent possible.
9. Europe itself is also concerned by a number of “unresolved
conflicts”, “frozen conflicts” or “post-conflict situations”. During
the still ongoing war in eastern Ukraine, where military confrontations
have worsened again since the beginning of 2017,
more than 1.5 million people have
been displaced in recent years, one third of them children.
Already
in February 2016, UNICEF had drawn attention to the critical situation
of children in the third year of the war in the eastern part of
the country; estimating that the lives of more than 580 000 children
were directly affected.
Further evidence in 2017 has shown
that in particular the more than 200 000 children living along the
“contact line” continue to pay a heavy price and were in need of
psychological support. UNICEF experts, for their part, regret that,
in the meantime, the conflict had become a somewhat “invisible crisis”
to all except those forced to suffer from ongoing violence, abuse
and deprivation.
10. Other regions in the Council of Europe area are concerned
by various degrees of armed conflict, such as, for example, over
Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Transnistria and Nagorno-Karabakh. These
regions may serve as examples here because, as in any conflict,
many children suffer from the consequences of these unresolved conflicts
which have led to large displacements of the population in these
regions. In the case of Nagorno-Karabakh, persistent tensions along
the line of contact have, on multiple occasions, led to outbreaks of
violence that have regrettably claimed lives of innocent civilians
on both sides, including children. Following the most recent outbreaks,
the Parliamentary Assembly co-rapporteurs for the monitoring of
Armenia and Azerbaijan recalled the need for both countries to resolve
their differences peacefully.
The Assembly has adopted several
resolutions on the above mentioned conflicts in which it has called
on all the parties to abide by their obligations as Council of Europe
member States with regard to these conflicts, but peace has regrettably
not yet been achieved.
2.2. Children as victims of violence,
trauma and deprivation
11. According to the international
non-governmental organisation (NGO) Save the Children,
the consequences
of war and armed conflicts for children are dramatic: numerous children
die in conflicts or are permanently disabled; up to 80% of victims
of sexual violence in conflict countries are children, notably girls; health
facilities and schools are attacked in many countries and misused
for military purposes; many children cannot attend schools, are
internally displaced or kept in detention centres. As mentioned
earlier, during unstable periods, and besides any physical harm
inflicted on them by bombing or shelling, children are more likely
to be victims of all kinds of violence. Whilst some are forced to
take part in conflict, to kill, or to act as suicide bombers and
commit other acts of violence, some are groomed to join armed groups,
driven by poverty or desperation.
Others are
enslaved and are sexually abused or otherwise exploited by armed
forces.
12. Evidence from various sources substantiates the fact that
children affected by and confronted with armed conflict and witnessing
violence cannot develop properly and reach their full potential.
They are not only kept away from their schools, or the latter are
destroyed or closed, but they often have to face the loss of family members,
thus the persons who provided them with care and protection. Consequently,
children are confronted at a very young age with traumatising situations
and have to find their own ways of surviving. As mentioned above,
many of them have to flee from conflict zones, with their families
or on their own, and will then arrive as refugees or migrants in
distant countries, cut off from their roots, other family members
and their usual daily environment.
13. In a context of war and conflict, many children experience
a sort of “normalisation” of violence. This can lead on to political
radicalisation and inter-generational transmission of violence.
In recent years, the latter has been evidenced in Northern Ireland
where the “trans-generational impact of exposure to conflict-related trauma”
was explored through the research project “Towards a Better Future”
initiated by the Northern-Ireland Commission for Victims and Survivors.
14. Countries in conflict regularly lack basic services, as also
reported from various countries by Save the Children; in some cases,
services are even totally disrupted and people are no longer able
to buy basic goods, like in South Sudan, where the conflict has
been going on for more than 20 years, over 20 000 children have been
recruited by armed forces and over 10 000 are unaccompanied after
having been separated from their families.
15. In Syria, children are concerned to a large extent by forced
recruitment, explosive hazards, sexual violence and child labour
or exploitation, across the country. For many children, violence
has indeed become a “normal” experience, and detention rates for
children are on the increase. The greatest impact on their lives, however,
happens through mental health consequences as shown in the most
recent Save the Children report of 2017: Bombing and shelling is
the first source of psychological stress in children’s daily lives;
their behaviour becomes more fearful and nervous, often more aggressive;
many suffer from bed-wetting as a symptom of toxic stress and post-traumatic
stress disorder (PTSD); others turn to drugs to cope with stress,
feelings of grief over lost family members or sadness; and the loss
of education is perceived as having a huge impact on their lives.
2.3. Special needs of migrant
and refugee children arriving in Europe
16. With regard to the special
needs of migrant and refugee children arriving in Europe, our committee
had the opportunity to gain some insight through the detailed report
at our hearing in Baku presented by a psychologist from Berlin (Germany)
working
with this category of children, including migrant and refugee children
from Syria, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Eritrea, Somalia, Nigeria,
Turkey, the Russian Federation, Ukraine and the Republic of Moldova.
The psychological support needed for refugees across Europe seems
enormous: Germany alone has welcomed more than 1.2 million refugees
over the past two years (about one third of them children); this
represented a challenge for public authorities at all levels, including
local authorities, civil society organisations and volunteers.
17. In particular, women and children arriving in Europe are highly
traumatised, anxious, insomniac, powerless and lethargic. Psychological
support for them is a complex task because the needs of children
and adults are very different albeit interconnected: while children
suffer from the loss of family members or are in fear of it, the
psychological state of parents also has an impact on children. Children’s
concerns are often neglected against the background of more immediate
challenges such as the father’s death, asylum procedures or a lack
of decent and safe accommodation. In order to protect children,
entire families therefore need support in their functioning and
cohesion. Much anxiety amongst families seems to be regularly generated
by long waiting periods in asylum procedures involving registration,
hearings and waiting for possible recognition. During this process,
families often stay in provisional emergency accommodation for long periods
of time, and thus in places which are not safe or child-friendly,
do not provide any private sphere and are characterised by tensions
between families and ethnic groups.
18. Whilst many children have an “inbuilt” protective mechanism
allowing them to split off traumatising experiences and segregate
different spheres of their lives, they generally find safe places
in nursery schools or schools where they are taken care of and can
play and forget. Professionals in contact with such children will
need special support and training, not least to develop their own
resilience, to avoid breaking children’s protective mechanisms,
and to create some kind of “normality” for these children.
19. According to the psychologist heard by our committee, the
main aim for professionals in contact with refugee children is not
to make children forget the terror encountered but to integrate
it into their daily lives and find forms of expression for it. Generally,
children seem to be much more accessible to such approaches than the
adults surrounding them who often feel ashamed or fear prejudice
or negative consequences of anything they do or say. Similar to
other trauma patients, refugees often show signs of depression;
many have an increased risk of suicide. Besides medical and psychological
interventions, a true “welcoming culture” and solidarity would be
needed as part of co-ordinated migration policies.
20. From this insight, we can certainly retain that education
and educational play activities will be a key means of reaching
out to and supporting children having suffered from war and armed
conflicts in whatever way. Many resources for doing so exist and
many countries have gained experience in this field over recent years;
a learning process at the international
level should therefore be initiated, involving stakeholders from national
educational systems and child protection agents sharing experience.
2.4. Children returning after
recruitment or use as child soldiers or from violent experiences
21. Across the world, numerous
children are being recruited as child soldiers and coerced into
taking part in hostilities, for example in Nigeria, where terrorist
groups like Daesh and Boko Haram use children to commit suicide
attacks, but also in Congo or Afghanistan. In Europe, the issue
of child soldiers is not as relevant even if somewhat questionable
practices can be observed in some countries.
22. However, child protection strategies must involve welcoming
and supporting children who have been fighting in armed conflicts
before arriving in Europe as refugees, as well as preventing, in
the first place, young Europeans from joining armed conflicts in
other countries: Regularly, children and young people experiencing poverty
and exclusion are seduced into joining terrorist groups like Daesh
in their fight for an “Islamic State”, making them believe that
this can provide them with the social purpose they were longing
for, as I have shown myself as rapporteur on “Preventing the radicalisation
of children and young people by fighting the root causes”, leading
to Assembly
Resolution
2103 (2016).
23. Instead of being criminally punished, children and young people
returning from conflicts need support in their rehabilitation, re-education
and reintegration into European societies. As a particular group
of victims, this also concerns children who were born in territories
controlled by Daesh. After having regularly witnessed rape, torture
or murder (or even taken part in these), they very often show aggressive
behaviour and low levels of empathy, and have nightmares and concentration
or neurological problems. Children’s perception of their place in
the world is altered, and the martyrs or commanders whom they consider
as role models lead them to a new sense of moral duties and of “right”
and “wrong”. Experts consider that a minimum of two years of daily intervention
by social workers, psychotherapists, teachers and other professionals
are needed to give these children a chance at a normal life, based
on security, stability and orientation.
2.5. Consequences for societies
as a whole and their stability
24. In terms of child protection,
new challenges have also arisen with changes in military strategy.
Recent tactics seek to blur the differences between those who fight
and those who do not by camouflaging combatants within the overall
population, in contravention of the Geneva Conventions. Consequently,
the use of non-targeted air bombardments and shelling is also on
the rise, killing mostly civilians, many of them children. Hence,
in many recent conflicts, combatants often directly target homes,
hospitals and educational infrastructure, thus undermining the functioning
of entire societies. The use of schools for military purposes and attacks
on school buildings raise great concern since they dramatically
increase risks for children (including through unexploded ordnance
left behind).
25. Apart from some of the direct effects for children described
above, armed conflicts also have the following consequences:
- they jeopardise the emergence
of stable and safe societies by mitigating children’s chances of developing
in safe countries. Being used to function on a paradigm of violence,
fear or anger may leave children unable to live a normal life, making
them aggressive and dangerous for themselves and for society. At
an individual level, we could say that children get “brain-washed”,
at a more collective level we observe the above-mentioned intergenerational
transmission of conflicts;
- armed conflicts have significant implications and consequences,
not least because high shares of public budgets are spent on arms.
Rebuilding societies, compensating for the damage inflicted on cities
and people, and rehabilitating and supporting the victims of conflicts
have a considerable cost over many years. Traumatised and handicapped
people, including children, will need medical as well as psychological
care that may last their entire life.
3. Child protection through
law – disrespect for international standards
26. The international community
has agreed to consider children, thus human beings below the age
of 18, as people who have special needs and whose best interest
should always be a primary consideration.
Despite
this consensus in international law, children remain the main victims
of armed conflicts because of their youth, dependence and vulnerability,
whether they are suffering from the consequences of war or become agents
of hostilities, for example as child soldiers.
27. According to international law, children should be shielded
from harm whatever their situation. In the event of armed conflict,
children legally benefit from the general protection provided to
civilians and from a special protection according to the fundamental
principles of the Geneva Conventions.
This
is recalled by the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC)
in Article 38(4): “In accordance with their obligations under international
humanitarian law to protect the civilian population in armed conflicts,
States Parties shall take all feasible measures to ensure protection
and care of children who are affected by an armed conflict.” Children’s rights
are also addressed specifically through the Optional Protocol to
the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of
children in armed conflict (which entered into force in 2002), aimed
at preventing the recruitment of child soldiers, which stipulates
in Article 2: “States Parties shall ensure that persons who have not
attained the age of 18 years are not compulsorily recruited into
their armed forces”.
Essential legal and policy guidance
with regard to child soldiers, can also be found in the 2007 Principles
and guidelines on children associated with armed forces or armed
groups (“Paris principles”).
28. However, the numerous and grave violations of children’s rights
in past and in ongoing armed conflicts show that, so far, the international
community has failed in its mandate to protect children. This was
confirmed to our committee by Save the Children, an organisation
which is very much present in the field in many countries.
According
to this NGO, the international legal framework aimed at protecting
children in war situations is quite robust; nevertheless, children
are more vulnerable today than ten years ago: Conflicts have become
more international, often involve extreme violence from different
sides and a shocking non-respect of international law and the institutions
controlling it.
29. In the face of such harrowing figures and human rights violations,
I would like to recall that it is our duty as political representatives
to ensure effective protection for all children. Targeted policy
responses need to be identified and implemented to ensure child
protection as conflicts rage on. In this respect, no later than September
2016, in my then capacity as the Parliamentary Assembly’s General
Rapporteur on Children, I called on European governments to step
up their action to protect and support children concerned by the
armed conflict in Syria, in particular in Aleppo where, at the time,
100 000 children were living in the conflict zone and were still
experiencing bombing by armed forces.
30. Children are amongst the most vulnerable and defenceless parties
in lasting conflicts across the world, and their fate must be given
all the attention required by the wealthier and more peaceful countries
of Europe if we do not want to generate a lost generation as a consequence
of the current wars in many countries. Even though some of the conflicts
take place in countries which seem far away, Europe is directly
concerned by their consequences (e.g. through refugee and migrant
flows) and cannot ignore its responsibility to protect the most vulnerable,
including by welcoming them in Europe and offering them the shelter
and care they need.
4. Urgent need for action –
better protection of children affected by armed conflicts
31. Despite the existence of numerous
legal instruments and programmes, children’s rights are still too frequently
violated in armed conflicts across the world and when dealing with
the consequences. This reveals a significant gap between the commitments
made by States Parties and their implementation. I believe this
is a gap we need to fill urgently and at various levels of action,
including by once more calling on all Council of Europe member States
to respect their obligations under international and European law
and to develop effective national policies in their own realm.
32. Next to putting an end to armed conflicts and re-building
societies, improving the protection of children implies identifying
the various ways in which children are affected by conflicts and
the weaknesses of protection systems at various levels in this respect
(global, European, national and local). There also is a need to
step up the political will amongst the international community and
national governments, to provide sufficient financial means to strengthen
child protection programmes and to develop adequate judicial levers
to fight impunity.
33. European stakeholders do not always have the power to intervene
directly to protect children in distant places like Aleppo or Sanaa
when hospitals or schools are being attacked, or to prevent such
attacks. As parliamentarians of Greater Europe, we must therefore,
on the one hand, recognise the limits of European action with regard
to these conflicts; and on the other we must increase the efforts
made by our respective governments to contribute to the political
resolution of such conflicts and their future prevention, also for
the sake of children. Governments across Europe and globally must
take coherent positions with regard to conflicts taking place in
distant countries, for example by refraining from publicly condemning
conflicts on the one hand and allowing large-scale deliveries of
arms to conflict parties to the benefit of their own national economies
on the other. They should also promote more child-centred views
amongst conflict parties to prevent the recruitment and use of child
soldiers, for example by supporting the criminalisation of child
recruitment and use, by supporting the establishment of independent
monitoring mechanisms and by improving the capacities of criminal
justice systems.
34. Wherever direct intervention in the prevention or halting
of conflicts is not possible for European players, we should support
children affected by armed conflicts through all possible means,
including by improving children’s living conditions and levels of
protection, by supporting their rehabilitation and reintegration
into society when returning from conflicts as child soldiers, as
well as through measures deployed for refugee children arriving
in Europe or internally displaced within European countries.
35. According to international experts gathered at a Wilton Park
conference in October 2016 (including the representatives of various
governments, international organisations and NGOs), the effective
protection of children from extreme violence has to address three
key issues: the prevention of child recruitment and their reintegration
into society, the prevention and fight against serious human rights
violations (e.g. abduction and exploitation) and the impact of the
armed conflict on all children.
36. The support to be provided to refugees or IDPs includes the
provision of basic services through government agencies at various
levels, including shelter, food and health care, but also education
and psychosocial and logistic support to integration. In Azerbaijan
and following the Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire in 1994, some 50 000
refugees and IDP families were settled in accommodation provided
to them through State programmes and community projects, also giving
them access to schools, nursery schools and rehabilitation centres.
Although these programmes have had a positive impact on many, the
children of past hostilities are now grown-up parents who still
transmit their own trauma to their descendants. Children and adolescents,
even if no longer directly affected by hostilities, very often have
a continuous need for psychological assistance or other forms of
support. These can include leisure activities creating positive experiences
for them and relieving some of the stress they can feel in their
surroundings. For many years, experts even propose to set up joint
integration projects for children stemming from different conflict
parties as a first step towards a peaceful co-existence of future
generations.
37. In order to better protect children affected by armed conflicts
in various ways, a more child-centred approach is needed. Responding
to the needs of children, their families and the communities is
key for providing immediate protection, for preventing children’s
involvement in conflicts and for supporting recovery from violent
experiences. Addressing the drivers of children’s vulnerability,
including lack of opportunities, lack of access to education, militarised
environments, corruption and abuse of power, experiences of injustice
and discrimination, will lead to more socio-economic stability of
entire societies and contribute to preventing the exploitation of
children.
This broad approach
should be kept in mind by all stakeholders when addressing the issue
of children and armed conflicts in Europe or elsewhere.
5. Conclusions
and recommendations
38. The dreadful situations children
experience in war and armed conflicts ongoing in many countries
across the world calls for the development of fast and effective
responses at all levels, but starting at the highest level of accountability,
i.e. national governments and parliaments. It also requires the
implementation of comprehensive strategies based on political willingness
and committed public authorities that clearly determine the responsibilities
of the different stakeholders involved, and are aware of their possibilities
and limits for intervening. I will call on parliaments of the Council
of Europe member States to put the issue of “children and armed
conflicts” high on their political agendas and debate this issue
in order to come up with effective solutions for imminent, ongoing
or recent conflicts.
39. Based on some of the most valuable expert contributions received
during the hearing organised by the Social Affairs Committee at
its meeting in Baku (Azerbaijan) on 1 June 2017, my own research
into the matter, and a very fruitful exchange of views held at the
committee meeting on 19 September 2017 in Paris, I recommend the
following action to be taken by all Council of Europe member States:
- investing in the prevention
of conflicts and children’s involvement: The international community
has the tools and experience to prevent future conflicts, but international
instruments continue to be disrespected and violated in the most
shocking manner – political willingness to achieve and maintain peace
and promote the sustainable socio-economic development of countries
involved in conflicts is the first element visibly missing in many
situations;
- intervening to put an end to ongoing conflicts: All conflict
parties and external parties having committed to peace-building
processes in one way or another in recent years should stick to
their commitments and continue to do their utmost to achieve the
peaceful resolution of conflicts, thus avoiding further innocent victims
amongst the civilian population, including children. The most effective
way to protect children is by preventing and resolving conflict
and sustaining peace. Countries not directly affected by conflicts may
also work towards this via their international commitments, at the
United Nations level, for example;
- educating children and young people based on non-violent
approaches to end aggression and conflict cultures: Where conflicts
could be avoided, children and young people need to be made resilient
to the trans-generational transmission of violence; they need to
grow up with positive dialogue cultures instead of armed conflicts
as a means of overcoming substantial differences between nationalities
or ethnic groups. International diplomacy across countries and within
organisations like the Council of Europe, the OSCE and others plays
a key role in this area, but much can also be done through these
organisations’ or international youth work and field work with children
and young people;
- reinforcing child protection and support mechanisms at
all levels: Welfare support to individual children and families,
both within conflict countries and countries welcoming refugees
should be stepped up. The socio-economic opportunities for children
and their families need to be improved both in countries of origin
and countries hosting refugees. International organisations and
NGOs working in the field in conflict countries need governmental
and financial support in order to ensure easy access to children
in need and continuity of programmes according to international
standards (e.g. in terms of the number of carers for a given number
of children);
- supporting and rehabilitating former child soldiers and
other children who have been actively involved in conflicts: Children
having been recruited as child soldiers by force should be treated
as children and not like adult offenders. They should not be detained in detention
centres but handed over to the care of child protection agencies
also supporting their reintegration into normal education systems,
job markets and social life. Children having themselves experienced
war and armed conflict should be involved in peace-building action
where appropriate (and avoid re-traumatisation). Relevant programmes
should be promoted among all conflict parties in the world;
- welcoming and supporting children who have left conflict
zones: Specialised support should be given to child refugees, migrants
and IDPs having experienced violent and traumatising situations
when arriving in safe destinations, including in different European
countries. Professionals dealing with such children need to be specially
trained, to avoid re-traumatising children and breaking their natural
protection barriers, and instead be in a position to create new
positive life experiences for them. In the interest of European
societies themselves, this also concerns children and young people
having returned from territories controlled by Daesh, where children
are profoundly “brain-washed”; they should not be treated like criminals
but like mistreated children.
40. In tackling these issues related to the protection of children
affected by armed conflicts, European stakeholders must keep in
mind that the playing field is extremely complex. Even where interventions
in ongoing conflicts or anti-terrorist strategies are well-intended
in the long term, they are not necessarily always in line with immediate
child protection concerns. Fighting certain conflict parties regularly
affects the civilian population, thus children as well. The most
thorough analyses and the most sensitive approaches to the problem
are therefore required, which range from the involvement of international
expertise to the consideration of national and local specificities,
histories and concerns. Across Europe and the world, we regularly
observe that political elites in fragile States are primarily focused
on consolidating power and holding on to it, but are not concerned
with international laws protecting children; to protect children
in a more effective and sustainable manner, practitioners should
therefore be enabled to work at the very local and community level.