This HuffPost Canada page is maintained as part of an online archive.

War In Syria And Yemen Prove We No Longer Care About Protecting Kids

The gradual erosion of public consciousness for our common duty to protect children seems to have made the world numb to egregious violations.
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

A few milestones this month: seven years of war on children in Syria; three years of war on children in Yemen. Who marks those milestones? Who cares?

On 20 March 2018 in Adra in eastern Ghouta in the Syrian Arab Republic, one-month-old baby Judy arrived on Thursday at one of the schools sheltering families fleeing eastern Ghouta with her mother, Samira, and grandfather. She received much-needed vaccinations and was checked by a doctor at the UNICEF-supported mobile health clinic.
© UNICEF/UN0187717/Sanadiki
On 20 March 2018 in Adra in eastern Ghouta in the Syrian Arab Republic, one-month-old baby Judy arrived on Thursday at one of the schools sheltering families fleeing eastern Ghouta with her mother, Samira, and grandfather. She received much-needed vaccinations and was checked by a doctor at the UNICEF-supported mobile health clinic.

The gradual erosion of public consciousness for our common duty to protect children seems to have made the world numb to egregious violations. What's worse, we seem to be blind to the fact that the world of the future will be populated with humans — nearly 1 in 5 children who live in conflicts in the Middle East and North Africa today — who have first-hand experience of an international system that doesn't protect its most vulnerable members and allows those who attack children to continue to profit from these acts.

The wars in Syria and Yemen are the acceleration of this loss of common consciousness. The lack of public outrage on a large scale today, when children are being attacked and when it is impossible to claim ignorance of what's taking place, is a bleak indicator. The lack of effective political action is even worse.

On 27 March 2018 in the Aldailami School, Belad Alroos district, Sana'a, Yemen, UNICEF Representative in Yemen Merixell Relano (with white scarf) speaks with girl students. Nearly half a million children have dropped out of school since the 2015 escalation of conflict in Yemen, bringing the total number of out-of-school children to 2 million.
© UNICEF/UN0188786/Fuad
On 27 March 2018 in the Aldailami School, Belad Alroos district, Sana'a, Yemen, UNICEF Representative in Yemen Merixell Relano (with white scarf) speaks with girl students. Nearly half a million children have dropped out of school since the 2015 escalation of conflict in Yemen, bringing the total number of out-of-school children to 2 million.

Seven years ago, at the onset of a war that is still raging, two children were killed in Syria, sparking a wave of protest. Four years later, another brutal war erupted in Yemen. In 2014, the world's consciousness was supposed to be shaken when 1 million children from Syria became refugees. Today, they are 2,5 million.

In Yemen, a child died every 10 minutes from preventable diseases. Celebrated progress was dramatically reversed through outbreaks like polio, cholera and diphtheria. In 2016, we stated that the suffering of children in Syria and Yemen had hit rock bottom and couldn't possibly get worse. But 2017 turned out to be far more brutal, with more than 2,000 children verified killed or maimed for life. The actual numbers are likely to be much higher.

Images from these conflicts are everywhere. Some have gone "viral": Aylan, the three-year-old Syrian boy washed up on a beach while trying to reach safety; Omran, a five-year-old boy, shell-shocked in an ambulance, his face full of dust from his bombed-out house in Aleppo; Buthaina, the girl from Yemen with a bruised face, tiny babies with eyes wide-open leaving this world because of man-made hunger.

In 1989, the World adopted unanimously the International Convention on the Rights of the Child. Where has that political leadership gone?

The last seven years shall go down in history as an unprecedented war on children. A vicious race to the lowest point of horror, killing, brutality.

On 20 March 2018 in Adra in eastern Ghouta in the Syrian Arab Republic, a woman carries a child at the electricity complex in Adra, now home to around 13,000 people who have fled besieged eastern Ghouta.
© UNICEF/UN0187713/Sanadiki
On 20 March 2018 in Adra in eastern Ghouta in the Syrian Arab Republic, a woman carries a child at the electricity complex in Adra, now home to around 13,000 people who have fled besieged eastern Ghouta.

The wars in Syria and Yemen are only examples where the very basic principle of protection of children is being disregarded every minute of every day. There are many other conflicts or situations of extreme violence across the world, but with the same or similar cruelties for children.

Those directly accountable for this war on children; those supporting conflict and extreme violence indirectly; those condoning or standing by are sweeping aside values and laws that bind our common humanity: rules and principles of international human rights and humanitarian law that protect children under all circumstances; obligations that States committed to respect decades ago.

In today's world, these laws and principles, and with them our human values, are more critical than ever before. The protection of children under all circumstances is non-negotiable. The war on children, the war on humanity, is not an option!

On 15 March 2018, UNICEF nutrition specialist, Rajia Sherhan, screens the nutrition status of a child at a health facility in Douma, eastern Ghouta.
© UNICEF/UN0185389/Khabieh
On 15 March 2018, UNICEF nutrition specialist, Rajia Sherhan, screens the nutrition status of a child at a health facility in Douma, eastern Ghouta.

UNICEF and the child protection community will continue making the voices of children heard, and tirelessly advocate for the sacred child protection principle to be respected. In absence of political leadership, what else is there that each of us can and should do?

Our efforts on their own will never stop the war on children.

Geert Cappelaere is the UNICEF Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa.

Close
This HuffPost Canada page is maintained as part of an online archive. If you have questions or concerns, please check our FAQ or contact support@huffpost.com.