Recommendations to the Security Council

Since December 2019, the novel coronavirus COVID-19 has claimed thousands of lives globally, with an increasing number of governments putting in place measures to mitigate its spread. These measures have also impacted the work of the UN Security Council, leading to the agreement on March 27 of new procedures for its meetings and adoptions.

Already vulnerable, children in situations of armed conflict are at heightened risk at this time. If not contained, the virus is likely to have significant impacts on healthcare systems already battered by conflict and the provision of lifesaving humanitarian assistance, and further disrupt children’s access to education. Grave violations of children’s rights are likely to continue, but in silence, if response measures limit capacity to monitor, report, and respond. Watchlist remains committed to its mission to protect children in situations of armed conflict and continues its work remotely.

For a printable PDF version of Watchlist’s April 2020 Monthly Children and Armed Conflict Update, click here.

Sudan/South Sudan (Abyei)

The Secretary-General (SG) is expected to report to the Security Council on the situation in Abyei prior to April 15, pursuant to SCR 2497 (2019). The UN Interim Security Force for Abyei (UNISFA) is mandated through May 15, 2020. In January, the Council issued a press statement condemning violence between the Ngok Dinka and Misseriya communities in the Kolom area of Abyei on January 22, which resulted in the deaths of approximately 30 civilians, including children, and called for immediate cessation of violence against civilians. According to UNISFA, six children who were reported missing after the attack have been reunited with their families.

The Security Council should:

  • Request an update from the Governments of Sudan and South Sudan on efforts to jointly investigate and hold accountable those responsible for the January 22 violence against civilians, including children;
  • Ensure adequate child protection expertise is maintained within UNISFA, including capacity to monitor child’s rights violations in Abyei;
  • Request the SG to include children and armed conflict as a specific aspect of future progress reports on UNISFA, disaggregating data on the six grave violations, and signaling priority concerns to guide Council action on Abyei.

 

THE UNITED STATES IS THE LEAD COUNTRY ON SUDAN/SOUTH SUDAN.

Syria

Government forces, including the National Defense Forces and pro-Government militias, and six armed groups are currently listed in the annexes of the SG’s annual report for at least one grave violation against children. In April, the Security Council is expected to receive monthly briefings on the humanitarian situation, political process, and use of chemical weapons in Syria. On March 15, the conflict entered its tenth year. According to UNICEF, between 2014, when official monitoring began, and 2019, more than 9,000 children were killed or injured; close to 5,000 children were recruited into the fighting; and nearly 1,000 education and medical facilities came under attack. These numbers represent only verified data, the actual numbers of violations against children are likely much higher. Since December 1, 2019, more than 960,000 people, including 575,000 children, were displaced due to violence in northwest Syria. On March 5, Russia and Turkey reached a ceasefire agreement. Three previous ceasefires have failed. On March 13, the SG’s spokesperson indicated that a summary of the Board of Inquiry (BoI) findings would be shared publicly. In northeast Syria, at least 28,000 children from more than 60 countries remain in displacement camps; only 765 children have been repatriated since January 2020. The COVID-19 pandemic could have potentially devastating impacts on displaced children and vulnerable communities across Syria. The Security Council should:

  • Strongly condemn all violations of international humanitarian law (IHL) and international human rights law in Syria, and call for perpetrators to be held accountable, in particular for violations against children and those that may constitute war crimes or crimes against humanity;
  • Urge the SG to make public the conclusions of the BoI in northwest Syria, including attribution for violations to strengthen future accountability efforts;
  • Demand that all parties allow safe, timely, and unimpeded delivery of principled humanitarian aid and quality health services to civilians in need, including cross-border and cross-line humanitarian access to Syria;
  • Remind parties that all children, including those suspected of association with armed groups, are entitled to special care and protection under international law, and should be treated primarily as victims;
  • Call on countries of origin to safely repatriate foreign children and their families, following individual rights-based needs assessments, for the purposes of prosecution, rehabilitation, and/or reintegration, as appropriate, in line with international law and standards;
  • Call on the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) to promptly and fully implement their action plan, and urge other listed parties to develop and sign action plans to end and prevent violations against children.

BELGIUM AND GERMANY ARE THE LEAD COUNTRIES ON HUMANITARIAN ISSUES IN SYRIA.

Yemen

Six parties to conflict are listed in the annexes of the SG’s 2019 annual report on children and armed conflict for grave violations against children. In April, the Security Council is expected to receive its monthly report on the implementation of SCR 2505 (2020) and SCR 2451 (2018). Following a period of reduced violence in the final months of 2019, the conflict has escalated again since mid-January in Marib, Al Jawf, and Sana’a Governorates. Briefing the Council in March, Assistant Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Ramesh Rajasingham said civilian casualties have been on the rise in 2020, with children accounting for one in four casualties. On February 15, air strikes in Al Maslub District, Al Jawf Governorate, killed 26 children and injured 18. In addition, the recent violence has displaced at least 40,000 people and damaged civilian infrastructure, including hospitals. A recent report by Physicians for Human Rights and Mwatana for Human Rights found at least 120 health facilities or personnel were attacked by warring parties in Yemen between March 2015 and December 2018. The attacks documented in the report led to the killing of 10 children and injury of 28. The Security Council should:

  • Strongly condemn the continuing violence, including grave violations against children such as killing and maiming and recruitment and use of children, and resulting increase in civilian displacement; urge parties to commit to a full cessation of hostilities and work towards a comprehensive and inclusive peace process that includes meaningful child participation and protection measures, pursuant to SCR 2427 (2018);
  • Demand the immediate cessation of indiscriminate attacks, and attacks on hospitals, education facilities, and other protected civilian infrastructure in violation of IHL;
  • Demand all parties to conflict to allow safe, unimpeded delivery of principled humanitarian aid and quality health services to all civilians in need, including children, and ensure any recalibrations of humanitarian funding do not result in the denial of humanitarian assistance to children;
  • Welcome the adoption of the time-bound workplan of activities by the Saudi Arabia-led Coalition in December 2019, and call for its full and swift implementation;
  • Call upon the Government of Yemen to implement fully and without delay the December 2018 roadmap aimed at revitalizing its action plan to end and prevent child recruitment and use, immediately release all children within its ranks, and prioritize the establishment of age assessment mechanisms;
  • Urge all other listed parties to sign and implement timebound action plans to end and prevent grave violations, as the only path towards delisting from the annexes of the SG’s annual report on CAAC.

 

THE UNITED KINGDOM IS THE LEAD COUNTRY ON YEMEN. SAINT VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES CHAIRS THE 2140 SANCTIONS COMMITTEE.

Recommendations to the Working Group

Central African Republic (CAR)

In October, the Working Group received the SG’s fourth report on children and armed conflict in CAR. For targeted recommendations, see Watchlist’s January 2020 CAC Monthly Update.

Colombia

In January, the Working Group received the SG’s fourth report on children and armed conflict in Colombia. For targeted recommendations, see Watchlist’s February 2020 CAC Monthly Update.

Iraq

In January, the Working Group received the SG’s third report on children and armed conflict in Iraq. For targeted recommendations, see Watchlist’s February 2020 CAC Monthly Update.

Presidency of the Security Council for April:

Dominican Republic: Party to Geneva Conventions I-IV, Additional Protocols I-III, the Convention on the Rights of the Child and its Optional Protocol on the involvement of children in armed conflict, the Rome Statute of the ICC, and ILO Convention 182; has endorsed the Paris Principles and Commitments, the Safe Schools Declaration, and the Vancouver Principles.

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