Violence A Reality For Half Of World’s Children, Says WHO

1 min read

ISLAMABAD: Violence is a reality for half of the world’s children as one billion of them experience physical, emotional or sexual abuse every year.

“Experiencing violence is not only a violation of children’s rights, it also increases the risk of mental health conditions, non-communicable diseases such as diabetes and cancer, infectious diseases like HIV/AIDS, and social problems such as criminal activity and substance abuse,” said the World Health Organisation (WHO).

“Violence does more than harm individual children; it undermines the fabric of our society. It makes it harder for children to build happy, healthy lives and costs the global economy billions of dollars each year,” it stated.

To address this global tragedy, the governments of Colombia and Sweden, in partnership with WHO, Unicef and the UN special representative of the secretary general on ending violence against children will host the first-ever ministerial conference on ending violence against children in Bogota, Colombia on November 7and 8 this year.

It is hoped that the conference will also help secure a step-change in support for proven prevention solutions and reset collective ambitions to realise the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development target for every child to live free from violence.

“Possible outcomes will include revitalising country commitments for ending violence against children, announcing a new/renewed collective country-led initiative to end violence against children, launching a first-ever child/youth-led, movement dedicated to preventing child violence, adopting an inter-governmentally negotiated political declaration and hosting additional inclusive convening on pressing issues relating to ending violence against children,” it stated.

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Human Rights, in collaboration with WHO and Unicef, convened a consultation in Islamabad as part of the national preparatory sessions for the first global conference on ending violence against children (VAC).

The session assembled representatives from federal ministries, provincial governments, civil society, academia, and child protection experts to align Pakistan’s priorities with the global agenda to end all forms of violence against children.

Maryam Mallick, technical representative WHO, gave a detailed briefing on the global statistics on violence against children, objectives of the conference and the expected outcome.

Dr Luo Dapeng, WHO representative in Pakistan, Ayesha Raza Farooq, Chairperson National Commission of Child Rights, Sarah Ahmad, Chairperson CP and WB Punjab, Rabeea Hadi, Director CPI, Susan Andrew, Chief of Child Protection at Unicef, and Mohammad Arshad, Director General IC at the Ministry of Human Rights, attended the meeting.

Susan Andrew acknowledged Pakistan’s recent progress but emphasised that much more work remains to be done. She called for stronger political will and collaboration to ensure that child protection systems reach the most vulnerable.

Published in Dawn, October 6th, 2024

Previous Story

Experts Sound Alarm Over Rise In Hepatitis A Cases Among Children

Next Story

Teachers Observe Black Day Against Govt Policies

Latest from Blog

Three Held Over College Girl’s Death in Jhang; Gang Rape Suspected

TOBA TEK SINGH: Jhang police arrested three suspects allegedly involved in the kidnap and death of a first-year college student in the city. Jhang District Police Officer Sajid Hussain had taken notice of the incident and formed a special team that arrested the suspects. On June 7, information was received…

Man Kills Himself after Shooting Five Family Members in Quetta

QUETTA: A man shot dead his wife, four children and then took his own life in Wahdat Colony of Brewery Road area on June 8. According to police, Muhammad Asif, son of Musa Khan, who was an employee of the Civil Secretariat, also recorded a video message before killing himself,…

Parents’ Suicide Leaves Two Toddlers Abandoned

CHAKWAL: Two toddlers were left abandoned after their poverty-stricken parents died by suicide, police sources said on June 6. The incident occurred in Chak Chakora village within the jurisdiction of Dohman Police Station on Friday evening. Mohammad Nadeem, 42, was first married to a close relative. He had seven daughters…

Damaged Childhoods

CHILD abuse is so prevalent that the UN ranked Pakistan as the least safe country for children. Even so, more than five years after the Zainab Alert, Response and Recovery Act, 2020 — Pakistan’s first national child protection law — central provisos, including the agency for rapid alerts for missing…

IO Booked on LHC Order for Spoiling Probe in Sexual Assault Case

CHAKWAL: On the orders of the Lahore High Court Rawalpindi Bench, a case has been registered at City police station Chakwal, against Sub-Inspector Mukhtar Ahmad, in-charge of the Special Sexual Offences Investigation Unit (SSOIU), police sources told Dawn on Friday. The case was filed under Section 155C of the Police…
Go toTop