Selasa 09 Dec 2014 06:30 WIB

UNICEF: 2014 a devastating year for millions of children

Syrian refugees wait to call their relatives at a center of the International Committee of The Red Cross at Al Zaatari refugee camp in Mafraq, Jordan, on September 15, 2014.
Syrian refugees wait to call their relatives at a center of the International Committee of The Red Cross at Al Zaatari refugee camp in Mafraq, Jordan, on September 15, 2014.

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, GENEVA -- The United Nations children's agency UNICEF declared 2014 a devastating year for children on Monday with as many as 15 million caught in conflicts in Central African Republic, Iraq, South Sudan, Syria, Ukraine and the Palestinian territories. Divisions among the veto-wielding powers of the UN Security Council are harming the world's children and sowing the seeds of future conflicts, according to the head of the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) on Monday.

This year, riven by conflicts, had been the worst in two generations for children around the world, but 2015 looks set to be even worse, UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake said.

"This reflects the indisputable fact that the world is more divided politically among and within nations than ever before," Lake said.

UNICEF estimated 15 million children were caught up in wars in Syria, Iraq, Central African Republic, South Sudan, Ukraine and the Palestinian territories, and 230 million children globally live in areas affected by armed conflicts.

"If you compare the severity of the plight of the children with the attention of the world to that plight, I don't suppose that gap has ever been bigger."

The big powers had always been divided, but the consequences of their divisions are now greater than ever before, Lake said, who served as US National Security Advisor under President Bill Clinton. It was in their own security interests to stop conflicts such as Syria's war and prevent humanitarian crises, he said.

"If these conflicts become endemic in the next generation and the generation after that, then what hope is there for the whole region in the Middle East, and ergo, what hope is there for the kind of stability there that the rest of the world needs for so many reasons?"

At the same time aid agencies, stretched by new crises like Ebola, lingering ones like Syria, and forgotten ones like those in Yemen or Afghanistan, had less and less capacity even to put "bandaids" on the conflicts, Lake said.

The foundations of the future would be built in the hearts and minds of children, not the physical infrastructure of schools, he said. Lake has stopped asking refugee children about their hopes for the future because it was "too heartbreaking".

"If you can't get these kids into school where they will both learn things and feel safer, then they are going to be very ill-equipped to rebuild their societies someday because they simply won't know enough."

Traumatized children needed help to cope with the horrors they have seen, he said.

"Otherwise they are simply going to recreate what they consider to be normal in the next generation and seek revenge rather than reconciliation, and everybody is going to pay the price."

sumber : Reuters
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