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The State of Afghanistan’s Children Almost Seven Years After the Invasion

Sunday, March 2nd, 2008

On October 7, 2001 allied forces invaded Afghanistan, and while the war is not at the forefront of most peoples minds, sadly the effects of the Taliban and the war are far from being distant memories. Thus it is children who ultimately pay the higher price for the conflict. While the north of the country remains relatively stable, the south continues in conflict, and while there is some improvement in many children’s lives. The mental scars of the conflict remain across the country and all areas of children’s lives are effected by continuing instability.

A new report, Taking Stock: Afghanistan Women and Girls Seven Years On, from the international rights group Womankind Worldwide says that Afghanistan remains one of the most dangerous places in the world to be female. Seven years after the US and the UK liberated Afghan women from the oppressive Taliban regime, Womankind says life for most Afghan women and girls has not improved, and form many life has actually grown worse since the war. According to the report, 8 out of 10 women are affected by domestic violence; over 60% of all marriages are forced; and half of all girls are married before the age of 16. Maternal mortality rates (one in six women dies in childbirth) are the highest in the world alongside Sierra Leone. The report also states that Afghanistan is the only country in the world to have a higher suicide rate among women over that of men.

“Women in Afghanistan are working to tackle these issues by supporting individuals affected by violence and promoting legal reform — but they urgently need more support,” said Womankind Worldwide’s Director, Sue Turrell.

The report also states that laws which where introduced to protect women are not being properly enforced, and that the process of including females in the country’s social and political life has been unacceptably slow.

On March 26th children across Afghanistan will begin a new school year, and this year “the Education Ministry expects some 6.5 million children — some 35 percent of them girls — to attend schools across the country. Historically, that’s a record number of students, ministry spokesman Zuhur Afghan (RFE/RL).” However for many children this only serves to remind them of what they are missing, as the huge gap in opportunity, especially for women and girls in the country’s north and south are quite clear. The main reason for the large scale difference is the varying pace of improvement and stability from one side of the country to the other. In the last two years the Taliban’s influence and hold has been on the rise, leaving those in the south to lead their daily lives in fear of violence.

Many boys are now finding themselves amongst the ranks of the Taliban, leaving many to question if “Poverty is pushing youth into arms of Taliban?With a weak infrastructure the Afghan government cannot cope with the shear numbers of those in need, and it is here that the Taliban has looked to reclaim the people.

“In our district many young guys join Taliban ranks for pocket money, a mobile phone or other financial incentives,” said Safiullah, a resident of Sangeen District in Helmand.

Afghanistan is also the worlds leading hotbed for opium production, in some regions, mostly rural, many mothers give children opium, some up to three times a day. Opium is used as a treatment for just about any illness, or to calm colicky children, and mothers remain oblivious to the health effects the drug has on their children’s lives. Sadly education and awareness, let alone drug rehablitation prorgrams and centers, are far and few in between.

In other recent news a stunning report, Love, Fear and Discipline: Everyday Violence toward Children in Afghan Families, issued on February 24, 2008. The report was issued by the Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit (AREU), a Kabul-based think-tank, shows that the use of corporal punishment is seen as a mainstay of parenting. “Slapping, ear-pulling, verbal abuse, kicking, punching, beating with sticks or electricity cables or shoes,” are most common according to the report. The report recommended that programs to show alternatives be put into place and that such programs recognize that most families are aware of the negative consequences of violence to children, stating that “campaigns should therefore focus on informing people about alternative parenting skills”; of which few parents admit they are unaware of. In addition the report highlighted on the use of child labor in the country, illustrating the need for children to work outside the home is the only form of survival for many families; despite the long term effects of children having little to no access to education.

What is the fate of the children of Afghanistan? The answer appears to be marred in tones of grey, however large the divide among the regions one thing is clear, and that is that children must be given a higher priority by state and local government agencies. Awareness campaigns and education must be put into effect to ensure and safeguard the future of all children, as should efforts to curtail the growing insurgency in the south. For now one must look at Afghanistan with a watchful, but hopeful eye.

“The most effective kind of education is that a child should play amongst lovely things.” - Plato

Friday, February 29th, 2008

Children should play among lovely things, but sadly many children live amongst hate and violence and this the bases for their education.  Life is our biggest teacher and a child’s mind is shaped by the environment in which they are raised.  While violence does not always lead one towards the path of a violent life, it does leave a lasting impression, and no childhood should be filled with the images of war.

News…

Thursday, February 28th, 2008

The number of cases of drug-resistant tuberculosis around the world is higher than ever, the World Health Organization (WHO) warned Tuesday. Eastern Europe, China and India have been hit particularly hard, the agency notes in its report, driving concerns that some health care systems may soon be overwhelmed by the potentially lethal disease.

10 UN agencies urge end to female genital mutilation, a painful and dangerous ritual still imposed on many girls in Africa, Indonesia and the Middle East. The initiative to change this tradition best comes from the inside, as evidenced by several West African villages that have abandoned the practice, the UN says.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urges General Assembly to hold special session on suicide bombings, considering them a growing threat against humanity and political stability, a UN spokeswoman said Wednesday. Ban will personally urge General Assembly President Srgjan Kerim to hold the session, the UN chief told leaders of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, a Jewish rights group that has pushed for the initiative.

U.S. lawmakers, agree to triple AIDS funds, the U.S. House of Representatives have reached an agreement with the Bush administration on new legislation that would authorize $50 billion over five years to fight HIV/AIDS in poor countries and help children orphaned by the disease. The amount, if approved, would more than triple the funds for the White House’s global anti-AIDS program, which already is the largest commitment ever by a government to fight a disease in foreign countries.

World’s food price crisis expected to worsen, as food staples have risen 75%worldwide since 2005 due to a combination of growing demand, rising oil prices and global warming, and the troublesome trend shows little sign of abating. As a result, more governments are forced to struggle with hostile protests, food riots and widespread dissatisfaction, in addition to trying to counteract the growing threat of malnutrition.

WHO warns Paraguay’s yellow fever going urban, for the first time in six decades in Latin America. WHO officials said improvements to the hygiene and sanitation situation in and around the capital Asuncion, accompanied by a widespread vaccination campaign, are key to helping to prevent the spread of the disease.

China mulls end to one-child policy Chinese officials said Thursday the government is considering an end to its controversial one-child policy in light of an aging population and widening gender gap due to cultural preferences for male children.

Child abuse spreading in Zimbabwe, UNICEF warns, largely because of increased family tensions related to the country’s economic collapse, UNICEF said Wednesday. The agency rolled out a new campaign in the southern African country called “Stand Up and Speak Out,” urging people to battle the “staggering statistics on the unspeakable evils of child abuse.”

UNICEF and the Gulf charity Dubai Cares have launched a new education initiative to help bolster access to education for children and promote gender equality in the small East African nation of Djibouti. Although 126,000 children in Djibouti are old enough to go to primary school, tens of thousands of them are not enrolled, and more than half of these are girls. Under the new partnership, UNICEF will use almost USD 1.9 million in funds donated by Dubai Cares to build new schools and rehabilitate existing ones, as well as to spur school enrollment through awareness-raising.

Conflict Continues to Destroy Children’s Lives in Sri Lanka

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

Sri Lanka has been engaged in a civil war for 25 years, causing displacement, death, and poverty, and while many have longed for peace it appears it now one step farther away, as on January 16, 2008 the Sri Lankan government ended a 2002 ceasefire with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Since calling off the ceasefire agreement dozens of innocent civilians, many children have become the targets of hostility. Currently their are some quarter of a million people displaced, a large majority of whom are children, left without their basic fundamental rights to education, healthcare and nutrition.

The escalating war takes toll on children, as more are killed and injured in attacks attributable to the Tamil Tigers, and fighting with government forces. Many of those injured or killed have been children on their way home from school. The result of the attacks have left massive disruption to education as parents flee their homes in search of safety to escape the bombing attacks. Since the beginning of 2008 at least 21 child deaths have been reported in assaults blamed on the Tamil Tigers and government forces in the northern and southern parts of the island.

“Both the Sri Lanka government and the LTTE are failing to comply with their obligations under international humanitarian law and are killing civilians on an increasingly regular basis. With no perpetrators brought to justice a climate of impunity is becoming entrenched: unless these patterns are reversed the future appears bleak” said Tim Parritt, deputy program director for Amnesty International Asia-Pacific.

Additionally the use of claymore mines, a landmine type of explosive mostly hidden underground; explodes when stepped on or driven over, has escalated in the past three years have been used to indiscriminately target civilians, including children. On 29 January,2008 20 people, including 11 children, were killed as the school bus, which travels each day on the same route, was hit by a mine explosion (Claymore mines used to lethal effect). According to recent reports from Amnesty International, government forces are preparing to launch major offensives against the Tigers in the northern parts of the island, which will further intensify the violence.

Sadly`the lives of children are not only being destroyed by attacks and the crossfire of forces, but also by their recruitment as child soldiers. Countless thousands of child soldiers have been forcibly recruited by Tamil Tiger rebels during the 25 year conflict, some 3,516 during the period of the 2002 ceasefire with the government (UNICEF/HWR). The agency states that this figure represents only a portion of the total number of children recruited. Just this week youths with LTTE links surrender to Security Forces, according to government defense sources at least 44 youths (ages where not stated) surrendered to the Security Forces on Tuesday, February 26th to seek protection from the Human Rights Commission. While the recruitment of children has decreased in recent years, any use of children in combat remains a deplorable act. “Between 1 November 2006 and 31 August 2007, some 262 children were recruited by the LTTE, including 32 who were re-recruited, according to reports received by the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF). This represents a significant decrease as compared to the previous 12-month period, when 756 children were reportedly recruited, including 97 who were re-recruited (UN).”

The war, which has has left an estimated 70,000 people dead since the beginning of the conflict in 1983, continues to rage and in its wake one finds the innocent and the lost…the children. It is therefore apparent that neither the ceasefire agreement or the actions to call it off have been effective in eliminating abuses of children, and that all parties must be held accountable for their actions in both domestic and international law. As a global community we can no longer watch as decades more children in Sri Lanka are left to know nothing more than violence.

Increase of impoverished children in Nigeria

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008

The number of vulnerable children in Nigeria is growing and is expected to rise to 10 million by 2010. However the news has not settled well with everyone, and has left others in fear. The Nigerian government issued a census survey census of “vulnerable children”, earlier this month which aims to take a closer look into the lives of children in poverty. However the survey upset many families, who fear they will be looked at unfavorable, or face reprimand child labor. Children who are born into impoverished families are often sent to work by their parents or guardians, at very young ages -some only toddlers. (BBC)

“Any child you see who is vulnerable is a direct reflection of the situation of his parents”

The Nigerian government is looking deeper into the problem of poverty and hopes this will give them better tools to fight poverty. While many families feel forced into sending children to work, due to their extreme economic hardships, many others see the use of child labor as no big deal.

A 2003 FOS/ILO National Child Labour Survey estimated that there are some 15 million children engaged in child labor in Nigeria. Children in Nigeria are forced to work as domestic laborers, become street hawkers, work in quarries and in the cocoa fields. In addition child trafficking, including sex trafficking, within Nigeria and across borders continues to remain a large scale problem.

The problem with the forced labor of children is that it in turns creates a vicious cycle of the same poverty that parents and families are seeking to escape. Children are receive little to no school and thus are These The use of child labor can therefore cause, or increase the socio-economic problems that forced them into work as a child laborer. Children regardless of age and socio-economic background have a say in their future, and should never be forced to endure labor in their youth, as should no child ever be denied an education. The denial of education, only denies children a key to their future, an opportunity to prosper. It is clear that the Nigerian government needs to look deeply and consider multiple sustainable options for those communities grappling with endless poverty to ensure the delivery of children from the grip of poverty.

To ban or not to ban; cluster bombs a deadly killer in the streets

Monday, February 25th, 2008

The debate over the use of cluster bombs has hit the boil in recent months, however it looks that the issue will not be cooling down anytime soon. More than 120 nations tried to resolve the issues related to the use of cluster bombs, this past week. As the talks ended on Friday no agreement was made and no resolution was signed. Those taking part in the negotiations in Wellington, New Zealand, included 76 states which stockpile cluster munitions and a majority of the cluster bomb producers. The US is not taking part in the negotiations, nor are other producers of the weapons, such as Russia, China, India, Pakistan and Israel.

U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Janine Burns said in a statement Thursday, that the US “shares in the humanitarian concerns that have been raised about cluster munitions but is opposed to any ban on them because of their demonstrated military utility.”

The Children and Armed Conflict Report, which was issued on December 27, 2007, stated;

“Member States are urged to address immediately the grave humanitarian, human rights and development consequences of cluster munitions. To that end, Member States are encouraged to conclude a binding instrument that prohibits the use, development, production, stockpiling and transfer of cluster munitions that cause unacceptable harm to civilians; requires the destruction of current stockpiles of those munitions; and provides for clearance, risk education and other risk-mitigation activities, victim support, assistance and cooperation, and compliance and transparency measures..”

Ban urged the Security Council to tackle the issue of cluster bombs, air-dropped or ground-launched munitions which launch a number of smaller submunitions (”bomblets”), which can cover large areas of land. The bomblets can be distributed either by aircraft, rocket, or by artillery projectiles.

Cluster bombs have been used by Eritrea, Ethiopia, France, Israel, the Netherlands, Nigeria, Russia, Serbia and Montenegro, Sudan, the UK and USA. Those countries which are most affected are Afghanistan, Cambodia, Iraq, Laos, Kosovo and Vietnam. The use of cluster bombs have been used since Vietnam, and continue into the Iraq war, killing thousands of civilians, many of which are children.

Cluster bombs linger in Vietnam after decades continuing to kill, illustrating the long term dangers of the use of cluster bombs. How many children are affected by cluster bombs? The exact number is unknown, however it is estimated that children are some 40% of the casualties caused by cluster bombs.  Many of the deaths caused by cluster bombs are children, much of the reason is due to their bright colors which children are drawn to. They are scattered across fields and city streets, just lying in wait for a child to pick them up. Cluster bombs not only kill, they violate children’s rights to play, as once youth filled fields now lie empty for fear of unexploded bombs.

“They thought it was a kind of ball,” said Hala’s aunt, weeping. “They only wanted to play.” (Children the main victims of cluster bombs)

HIV/AIDS News…

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

Blood donation drives have been held in Kenya to meet the demand that has been caused due to the continuing post-election violence. In wake of the high demand the shortage of regular blood donors has only become more apparent. Donations must be screened for HIV to ensure they are safe for transfusion, and thus many do not donate as they fear learning of their HIV status. Campaingners are encouraging people to check their status and working to disolve myths and fears about the virus. “…about 10 percent of the 80 pints of blood collected during an average one-day blood drive usually had to be incinerated because of the presence of HIV, syphilis or hepatitis B or C.” (IRIN).

Infectious diseases kill a surprisingly large number of women during pregnancy, according to a study published Feb. 19 that suggests many maternal deaths in the developing world are preventable. The study in the journal PLoS Medicine showed that many more women in a large Mozambique hospital died from four infectious diseases - AIDS, malaria, bronchial pneumonia and meningitis - than from conditions directly linked to pregnancy. The diseases appear to play a similar role across sub-Saharan Africa, a region that accounts for a lion’s share of the estimated 500,000 maternal deaths worldwide each year, the researchers said. (Reuters)

GlaxoSmithKline cut the prices on its range of HIV drugs offered to developing countries, marking the fifth such discount since 1997. The most significant reduction was an almost 40% reduction of Ziagen, the drug recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a first- and second-line treatment particularly for children. The average discount across its 14 not-for-profit HIV medicines was 21%. (Reuters)

The International Federation of Red Cross (IFRC) and Red Crescent Societies announced during the Eastern Africa Partnership Meeting in Entebbe, Uganda, an appeal for USD 65 million to support Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies in Eastern Africa in fighting HIV over the next three years. The program aims to reach 17 million people with information on prevention over the three years, provide care and support to nearly 30,000 people living with HIV and 130,000 orphans and vulnerable children.

President George W Bush says the US will help provide 5.2 million mosquito nets as part of a broader campaign to tackle malaria in sub-Saharan Africa. He said it would provide free nets for every Tanzanian child aged one to five. Malaria is the main cause of death for children in Africa, killing a child every 30 seconds, the United Nations says. The US, Tanzania and the Global Fund to fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria will distribute the nets. (BBC)

News…

Saturday, February 23rd, 2008

Twenty-four cities from Atlanta to Tel Aviv to Bangkok have agreed to turn off their lights for one hour on March 29 to draw attention to global warming. Organizers said more cities may join the event and that some 30 million people may participate (Associated Press). In related news UN officials say Human rights threatened by global warming

Central Mozambique is recovering from its worst-ever flood, emergency workers are trying to contain an outbreak of cholera, affecting more than 600 people in Mutarara district, Tete province, leaving ten people dead. ActionAid is working with the government and ngos to improve hygiene in resettlement camps, 100,000 have been evacuated, where many still live in tents or simple shelters.

Bolivia has officially declared a natural disaster, as more than 60,000 families affected by heavy flooding. Many have been rescued and taken to camps, hundreds are suffering from waterborne diseases and acute diarrhea. An estimated 52 people have died, eight are missing and more than 616,000 hectares of crops destroyed as rivers burst their banks (Plan UK).

In Haiti ensuring adequate nutrition for children younger than two is more beneficial than intervening with food assistance after young children show signs of malnourishment, according to a study published this month by the Lancet, a leading medical journal. The study compared the impact of two approaches implemented by US government-funded World Vision programs in Haiti. Researchers found that indicators of malnutrition - stunting, wasting and underweight - were 4% to 6% lower in communities participating in preventive programs, than those that which used recuperative approaches. (ReliefWeb)

In Indonesia poverty in the tsunami struck region of Aceh has fallen below the pre-disaster level, a new World Bank report shows, due to both peace and the large reconstruction effort. The Aceh Poverty Assessment 2008 report shows poverty in Aceh increased slightly in the aftermath of the tsunami, from 28.4% in 2004 to 32.6% in 2005. However, the poverty rate fell again in 2006 to 26.5%, below the pre-tsunami level, suggesting that the short lived rise was due to reconstruction activities. Despite any improvements, poverty in Aceh remains significantly higher than in the rest of Indonesia, with more than 30% of rural households below the poverty line, compared to less than 15% in urban areas.

“Each child is an adventure into a better life—an opportunity to change the old pattern and make it new.

Friday, February 22nd, 2008

-Hubert H. Humphrey (1911–1978), U.S. Democratic politician, vice president speech, July 27, 1965, Detroit, Michigan.

Children are all born into this world full of adventure, hope, and life. It is the men and women who go before them that mold them and shape their futures. Parents, teachers and civil leaders, are the ones who lead these open minds and souls down the roads which they take into adult hood. Each generation should lead a better life than the one before…is what we say and dream. Nonetheless this is not the reality for countless millions of children around the world, children who; die from preventable diseases, live daily in hunger, receive little to no education, fight the wars of their fathers, are raped and abused mentally and physically. As a global society we’re missing that children are the opportunity for hope and change, they are the ones that can make a better and new world for us all. Children are the key to a better society, a better world…a better future! Let us not forget that children can change the world and we can guide them to do so.

Russia’s Stranglehold on Human Rights Groups

Thursday, February 21st, 2008

Russia isn’t known for its openness to foreign or domestic NGO’s, or charities in general. Freedom and political will are bound tight in Russian philanthropy, regardless of intention or cause anyone can be placed in Russia’s stranglehold. Human Rights charities bare the brunt of the governments tight fisted rule, leaving many with even more speculation to the level of abuses within the country. Only those with something to hide draw the curtains!

On April 17, 2006 the Duma (Russia’s parliament) passed Law #7-FZ On Nonprofit Organizations, a law which regulates the activity of all the NGOs in Russia, some 500,000, including148,000 public policy organizations and 5,000 foreign NGO branches. Headed by the Justice Ministry and the Federal Registration Service. The law has been at the center of scrutiny since it was drafted in 2005, Putin claims the law is needed in the fight against terrorism and money laundering organizations that use NGOs as a cover. However many believe this is just a masquerade for an increasing authoritarian reign, tightening foreign influence and the involvement of certain civil and rights groups.

What does the law mean in the simplest terms?

  • Russian NGOs had to re-register with the state, and thus could be refused registration.
  • Annual reports must be filed with the authorities for Russian NGOs.
  • Inspections can be carried out (which are often systematically target).
  • Tighter control over foreign funding for Russian organizations.
  • A foreign NGO can be ordered to end a program if it is perceived as a threat to Russian national interest.

The real issues with the law is its lofty wording, which leaves much of it open to the interpretation of the the government official, and leaving NGOs vulnerable. The most vulnerable groups are those working in Chechnya, International Human Rights, Children’s Right’s, Counter terrorism, Social & Cultural Rights, Health & Human Rights, HIV/AIDS , and International Justice.

The newest victim to Russia’s NG law occurred this week when Russia denied an entry visa to Kenneth Roth, Executive Director of the New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW), preventing him traveling to Moscow to present a critical report.

“The (Russian) foreign ministry knew I was planning to come for a press conference. It cited a changing array of reasons for not issuing me a visa,” Roth told a news conference in Moscow by telephone from New York.

“This is the first time that Human Rights Watch has been refused a visa to Russia since the Soviet Union.”

“It’s also the first time that I personally have been refused a visa any place in the world since Nigeria’s Sani Abacha did so in 1997,” he said (Russia “denies visa” to U.S. rights campaigner).

HRW, along with other NGO’s have joined various rights groups in launching an attack on President Vladimir Putin and his government, for what they state is a deterioration in respect for human rights in Russia. Since Putin’s rise to power the heat has only increased for those in the human rights field and policy sector.

HRW’s 72 page report “Choking on Bureaucracy: State Curbs on Independent Civil Society Activism”, documents how the NGO law has been used to targeted various NGOs, mostly those working on controversial issues.

“With the new rules, NGOs live under a looming threat of harassment, and this is a serious threat to freedom of expression in Russia.” said Roth

The obvious strategic and almost witch hunt of NGOs in Russia leaves one to question the true democratic nature of a country willing to risk the rights and welfare of its citizens.  Only time will tell if the stranglehold will tighten or loosen.

Links and articles:
English Translation of the NGO Law, with Russian version
Russia’s NGO Law: An Attack on Freedom and Civil Society
Enforcement of the New NGO Law: A Deeper Look

The Russian NGO Law: Potential Conflicts with International, National, and Foreign Legislation
NGOs fear trouble as law comes into force
Rights Groups Complain Russia Is Stalling Funds
Kommersant - The Council Of Europe Examines The Provisions
Moscow Times - How Russia’s NGO Law Stacks Up
U.S. Helsinki Commission hearing on democracy in Russia
U.S. Official Says Law Part Of Antidemocratic Trend
U.S. State Dept. - Concern About Law’s Impact on Civil Society
Moscow Times - Putin Quietly Signed NGO Bill Last Week
Russia shuts foreign charity amid tighter NGO scrutiny