Africa

UN: Children increasingly victims of brutal Sahel violence

Hundreds of children in the Sahel were killed, maimed or forcibly separated from their parents last year, the United Nations said on Tuesday, as a jihadist conflict rages across the region.

In Mali alone, 277 children were killed or maimed during the first nine months of 2019, the UN children’s agency UNICEF said in a report, more than double the number in the year before.

Despite support from French and UN troops, Mali has been struggling to quell an Islamist insurgency that erupted in the north in 2012, and which has claimed thousands of military and civilian lives.

The conflict has since spread to the centre of the West African country, as well as neighbouring Sahel states Burkina Faso and Niger, inflaming ethnic tensions along the way.

The whole Sahel region has seen a “significant increase of violence against children who are caught in the cross fire”, according to the report, which added that hundreds had been maimed or forcibly separated from their families.


“We cannot help but be struck by the scale of violence children are facing,” said UNICEF’s regional director for West and Central Africa Marie-Pierre Poirier, in a statement.

“Hundreds of thousands of them have lived through traumatising experiences.”

But the impact of the conflict goes beyond violence.

Access to basic services such as food, water, medicine and education have also been “seriously compromised,” the report said.

This year, the UN estimates that some 709,000 children under five will suffer from acute malnutrition across Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger, and some 4.8 million people could suffer from food insecurity.

With increasing militant attacks on schools, teachers and pupils, education has also taken a dire turn.

Between April 2017 and December 2019, school closures increased six-fold in the central Sahel region, the report said.

And more than eight million children between the ages of six and 14 — about 55 per cent of the children who fall within that bracket — are not in school.

–AFP

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