UN
presses for universal ban on children’s
sale
UNITED NATIONS - The UN Tuesday launched a major campaign for
universal adoption of treaty protocols that outlaw the sale of
children, child prostitution and pornography, and protect
youngsters in armed conflict, with the UN chief urging full
ratification by 2012.
“The sad truth is that too many children in today’s world
suffer appalling abuse,” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told a
ceremony at the headquarters of the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF)
in New York marking the tenth anniversary of the adoption of
the two optional protocols strengthening the Convention on the
Rights of the Child by providing a moral and legal shield for
youngsters vulnerable to prostitution and pornography or caught
up in armed conflict.
“Two-thirds of all Member States have endorsed these
instruments. On this tenth anniversary of their adoption, I
urge all countries to ratify them within the next two
years.”
Ban cited recent advances: the release three months ago by the
Maoist army in Nepal, under UN supervision, of more than 2,000
soldiers who had been recruited as children; the UN-assisted
freeing of children from the ranks of armed groups In C¶te
d’Ivoire; the prosecution by the International Criminal Court
(ICC) of former Congolese militia leader Thomas Lubanga for war
crimes against children.
He noted, too, that fewer and fewer States now permit children
to join the armed forces and reiterated his previous calls to
the Security Council to consider tough measures on those States
and insurgent groups that still recruit
children.
More countries are also reforming legislation and criminalizing
the sale of children, child prostitution, child pornography and
the exploitation of children, with international cooperation
helping to dismantle paedophile networks, remove child
pornography from the Internet, and protect children from
exploitation by tourists.
“Nonetheless, much remains to be done,” he declared. “In too
many places, children are seen as commodities, in too many
instances they are treated as criminals instead of being
protected as victims, and there are too many conflicts where
children are used as soldiers, spies or human shields.”
UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake
said the Optional Protocols “represent a promise made to the
world’s most vulnerable children - children born into extreme
poverty and despair, children in countries torn apart by
conflict and children forced into unimaginable servitude by
adults who regard them as commodities.”
The Optional Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed
Conflict has been ratified by 132 States; 25 States have signed
but not ratified it and 36 States have neither signed nor
ratified it. “We know from the situation on the ground that
much remains to be done. Violence against children in all its
forms remains a challenge for societies in the world,” Mr.
Ban’s Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict
Radhika Coomaraswamy said.
“There are a multitude of conflicts where children are used as
soldiers, spies, human shields or for sexual purposes. Every
additional ratification of the Optional Protocol would
therefore bring us closer to a world in which no child is
participating in hostilities and forced to serve the national
military or irregular armies.”
The Optional Protocol on the Sale of Children, Child
Prostitution and Child Pornography, has been ratified by 137
States; 27 have signed but not ratified and 29 have neither
signed nor ratified it.
“The Optional Protocol is an important tool for tearing through
the mantle of invisibility surrounding the sale of children,
child prostitution, child pornography and other forms of sexual
exploitation, to mobilize societies and to translate political
commitment into effective protection of children from all forms
of violence,” Mr. Ban’s Special Representative on Violence
against children.
Source:
http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online//International/26-May-2010/UN-presses-for-universal-ban-on-childrens-sale
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