Children

“Life is becoming more violent for children in the Palestinian Territory. By the end of 2006 more than 120 children had died due to the conflict, more than double the number of child deaths in 2005. Many more have been injured, some for life.”

UNICEF, 2007

"Children have the right to be protected from being hurt and mistreated, physically or mentally. Governments should ensure that children are properly cared for and protect them from violence, abuse and neglect by their parents, or anyone else who looks after them."

Article 19 of the United Nations Conventions on the Rights of the Child

Children in Palestine: The Facts

- 60% of Palestinians in the Occupied Territories are under 19-years-old.
- One in 3 Palestinian males aged 15-19 is an unskilled worker. Unemployment is a severe problem for young Palestinian men: 20% of 15-19-year-olds cannot find paid work.
- 20% of Palestinian females marry between the ages of 15-19. More than 1 in 10 subsequently divorce.
- According to the United Nations Fund for Children (UNICEF): “Conditions have rarely been worse for Palestinian children.” One in 10 Palestinian children now suffer from stunted growth due to compromised health, poor diet and nutrition and 50% of Palestinian children are anemic, and 75% of those under 5 suffer from vitamin A deficiency.
- UNICEF claims that roadblocks, barriers, checkpoints and soldiers are impeding health workers and patients, including child patients, from accessing health centers across the Occupied Palestinian Territory. Delivery of medication and equipment are also severely affected.
- On March 8th, 2007 Khaled Daud Faqih died at a checkpoint between the village of Kafr’Ain and the city of Ramallah. His parents were trying to take him to Ramallah hospital, but were detained at a checkpoint by Israeli soldiers. Khaled Daud Faqih was 6 months old.
- Rising poverty and unemployment is affecting school attendance across Palestine. In the 2005/6 school year the number of students whose families could not afford the NIS 50 ($11) school fee doubled from 29,000 to 56,000.
- Up to 67% of families are living in poverty across the West Bank. In Gaza poverty rates have spiraled to 85% this year, severely affecting every aspect of children’s lives.
- Increasing numbers of Palestinian children are now working to support their families instead of attending school. Palestinian children under the age of 14 can cross Israeli checkpoints without permits, and at least one thousand Palestinian children now cross into Israel every day, to work in garbage tips salvaging glass and metal. More than half of the Palestinian children who work in Israel, or Palestine, do not attend school at all.


Children in Conflict

The conflict between Israel and Palestine has dispro-portionately affected children, who often find them-selves directly in the line of fire in a war where nei-ther side can seem to draw the line between civilian and combatant.

According to Defense of Children International (DCI), whose field workers document each case of child death or injury, a total of 974 Palestinian chil-dren were killed in the seven years from the onset of the second Intifada to the opening of of the An-napolis Peace Conference. The vast majority of these deaths came as a result of Israeli air and ground assaults into Palestinian Territory. The second most common cause of death is cited as ‘random Israeli gunfire’.

Since the talks began at the end of last year until Sep-tember of 2008, the firing has not stopped. As a re-sult, 79 Palestinian children have been killed, and a further 370 injured. During this same period of time, 4 Israeli children have been killed and a further 11 injured as a result of the conflict.

Though it has been widely reported, there are no credible publications citing the number of child fa-talities in the month of October 2008. In spite of this the reader should be made aware that this disturbing statistic is expected to rise in comparison to previous months. The 2008 Palestinian Olive Harvest has been met with intense violence from the settlers making it one of the bloodiest autumns in recent memory.

Children in Israeli Prisons

Contrary to international norms and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, to which Israel is a signatory, children under the age of 16 in the oPT can be arrested, tried and treated in the same manner as adults.

Israel has often chosen to sidestep both its own regulations, and those of the UN Convention by charging and sentencing children as young as twelve years old.

Between the ages of 12-14, children can be sen-tenced for offenses for a period of up to 6 months. After the age of 14, Palestinian children are tried as adults. There are no juvenile courts, and children are often detained in centers together with adults.

This practice is also illegal according to the UN Con-vention on the Rights of the Child which states that “every child deprived of liberty shall be separated from adults unless it is considered in the child’s best in-terest not to do so”. Over the last eight years an es-timated 6,700 Pal-estinian children were arrested and detained in Israeli prison facilities and treated in the same manner as adults.

Child Psychology

The ongoing occupation of Palestine, and the humanitarian crisis which it entails, is an endless source of trauma in Palestine, especially among the young who lack the understanding and coping skills of adults. Fur-thermore, those adults who are mentally ill or affected by the occupation bring their traumas home where their wives and families bear the brunt.

According to Dr. Eyad El Sarraj, ‘the psychological effects of violence (on children) are severe and trauma-tizing. While many injured children have acquired a permanent physical disability, many more have devel-oped psychological impairments. The prevalence of neurotic symptoms and behavioural problems among children, such as disobedience or irritabil-ity, is high. According to recent research in the Gaza Strip, some 32.7% of children suffer severe levels of post-traumatic stress disorder, 49% moderate levels, and 16% low levels’.

According to World Health Organization’s Ra-jiah Abu Swai, ‘ children are more vulnerable (to mental illness). It is particularily important for children to be able to grow up in a situation in which they can feel secure and in which they do not experience fear. It is essential that they can sense that their parents are protecting them...When the Second Intifada started in 2001, there were many incursions, shellings and bombings into the West bank and in Gaza.’

‘In parallel, there were more recorded instances of violence in schools as well as aggression, night-mares and bedwetting at home. This is normal, because when a child sees that his parents are as scared as he is and are unable to control or stop a negative situation, he will become even more frightened or anxious’.





2 comments:

Anonymous said...

unbelievable ...!!!!!

VIVA PALESTINA said...

crazy ...
these are the terrorist that Israel is attacking everyday in Palestine ...
I CAN EASILY EXPECT ANYTHING FROM THIS STATE ... NO MORE SURPRISE OR SHOCKS ...