Study on Displaced, Migrant Children Launched

1 min read

PESHAWAR: The National Commission on the Rights of Child (NCRC), in collaboration with Unicef Pakistan and with support from the government of the Netherlands, on September 23 launched a study on the situation of displaced and migrant children in the country, along with an accompanying policy brief.

The study, titled “Generating Evidence on Internally Displaced Children, Afghan Child Migrants and Forcibly Displaced Children in Pakistan,” provides the first consolidated evidence on the experiences, vulnerabilities and protection needs of some of the country’s marginalised children, including internally displaced minors, Afghan migrant children and those forced to flee due to conflict, natural disasters or other crises, according to an official release.

It added that every child was a child first and foremost.

“No matter who they are or where they come from, every child deserves protection, dignity, and their rights,” said Sharmeela Rassool, Deputy Representative (Programmes) at Unicef Pakistan.

She said the research offered vital evidence to strengthen inclusive systems so no child in Pakistan was left behind.

According to the study, displacement for children often results in loss of identity, disrupted education, limited access to healthcare, and increased risks of child labour, early marriage, violence, and exploitation.

The policy brief issued alongside the report outlined five key recommendations for policymakers including expanding access to child protection services for all children, strengthening child protection systems through inclusive approaches, improving coordination and data-sharing mechanisms, raising awareness to ensure equal protection and enhancing communication with families about available services.

A panel discussion, moderated by Dr Mehek Naeem, member of NCRC (Punjab), featured representatives from UNHCR, the Commissionerate for Afghan Refugees, the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Child Protection and Welfare Commission and the Balochistan social welfare department.

The panel highlighted both challenges and opportunities in advancing child rights in displacement contexts.

Published in Dawn, September 24th, 2025

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

students arrested
Previous Story

Five Teens Booked in Jhang for Forcing Friends To Do Sexual Acts

Next Story

Punjab Govt Orders Fresh Probe into Faisalabad Children Hospital ‘Scam’

Latest from Blog

Children at risk

Pakistan has once again found itself in the middle of a rapidly expanding public health challenge: childhood obesity. The latest findings from the World Obesity Atlas 2026 should ideally serve as a wakeup call for our health authorities. Since 2010, the prevalence of obesity among Pakistani children and adolescents has…

Education for Prosperity

Pakistan possesses a demographic profile that could either become its greatest asset or its most destabilising liability. Unfortunately, we are headed in the wrong direction. To understand the scale of the challenge, it is important to recognise the extent of Pakistan’s educational underinvestment. Unesco has advised a minimum of 4-6…

Missing Boy Found Dead in Graveyard

BAHAWALPUR: The Musafir Khana police have recovered the body of a 12-year-old boy from a graveyard in Goth Mehro, around 30 kilometers from the city. The authorities suspect the victim was murdered following a sexual assault. The victim, identified as Muhammad Javed, son of Abdul Hamid, went missing on the…

Starved Childhoods

EVERY day, in homes across Pakistan, millions of children are quietly being left behind. Not by flood or famine, earthquake or epidemic, but by the slow, invisible erosion of chronic undernutrition. The crisis unfolding concerns the 40 percent of Pakistani children under five who are stunted, the nearly 10m children…
Go toTop