How to protect children in the tsunami zone
How to protect children in the tsunami zone
Keeping Children Safe from Exploitation Requires Action Now, UNICEF Says
LONDON, 8 January 2005 – Measures to protect children in the Tsunami zone from exploitation, abuse, and criminal trafficking are needed immediately to prevent them from slipping between the cracks, UNICEF said today, outlining the key steps essential to protecting orphans and other vulnerable children.
“The good news is that most of the needed efforts are already underway,” said UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy. “But we have to move fast,” she added. “Those who would prey upon children in this chaotic environment are already at work.”
UNICEF said the most vulnerable of the Tsunami generation are those who have lost their parents or have been separated from their families. While no reliable figures yet exist, estimates based on the numbers of dead and displaced suggest there may be thousands of children across the region who fall into these categories. Surveys now underway will help identify the scope of the issue in the next week or so. UNICEF said there are five key steps essential to keeping vulnerable children safe from exploitation in the immediate term.
Register all displaced children: UNICEF said that knowing which children are alone or possibly orphaned, and knowing exactly where they are, is the first critical step to protecting them.
In India, Sri Lanka, and Indonesia – the hardest-hit of all the tsunami countries – registration is underway. In Aceh, ground zero of the human catastrophe, five child-friendly registration centers in the camps are now open, and 15 more are planned for next week.
Provide immediate safe care: Children
identified as unaccompanied or lost must be placed in the
temporary care of adults accountable for their welfare. In
displacement camps, separate child-friendly care centers for
unaccompanied children may be established. Alternately,
children may be placed in community-based children’s homes
until their families can be located. Such options have
already been identified in each of the countries affected,
though more may be needed.
Locate relatives:
Registering children by name, address, community and birth
date allows local and national authorities – working with
NGOs – to trace and reunite family members pulled apart in
the disaster but who survived. It also enables authorities
to find members of extended family – aunts and uncles,
grandparents, or older siblings.
Alert police and
other authorities: UNICEF said it is essential to alert
police, border patrols, teachers, health workers and others
to the threat of child exploitation, and to enlist their
support in protecting children. This process of public and
institutional awareness is beginning to take place in the
affected countries. In Sri Lanka, government and key
partners, including UNICEF, have raised the issue in the
media so that all Sri Lankans are aware of the need to look
out for unaccompanied children. In Indonesia, police and
port authorities have been put on special alert.
Special national measures: Concerned about the prospect of
child trafficking from the tsunami zone, Indonesia put a
temporary moratorium on children under 16 from Aceh
traveling outside the country without a parent. The
government also put a temporary moratorium on the adoption
of children from Aceh until all children can be properly
identified and a process of family tracing completed.
The international standard in a crisis is to keep children as close to their family members and community as possible, UNICEF noted. Staying with relatives in extended family units is generally a better solution than uprooting the child completely.
“Family and community provide vigilance and protection for children,” Bellamy said. “With so many families torn apart, and so many communities completely destroyed, we have to pull together other kinds of protections for these youngsters. All people of good will have a role to play in looking out for the best interests of this tsunami generation.”
UNICEF emphasized that child trafficking, sexual exploitation, and extreme child labour are nothing new. But it warned that the breakdown of institutions in wake of the December 26 tsunamis left an opening for unscrupulous and criminal exploitation of the most vulnerable. She noted that the illicit trafficking of human beings is big business, not unlike trafficking in drugs or arms, with real money at stake and powerful interests involved.
“We have to want to protect children as much as others want to exploit them,” Bellamy said. “Based on the quick response of governments to this threat, it’s clear they want to provide that protection. But we have to do it together.”
ENDS