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Journal Article

Citation

Ćerimović E. Int. Rev. Red Cross (1999) 2023; 105(922): 192-216.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, International Committee of the Red Cross, Publisher Cambridge University Press)

DOI

10.1017/S181638312200087X

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

In armed conflicts and crises, children with disabilities face serious threats to their lives and safety, including those related to their inability to flee attacks, risk of abandonment, lack of access to assistive devices, lack of access to basic services and denial of education as well as experiences of stigma, abuse, psychological harm and poverty. Children with disabilities experience multiple and intersecting forms of human rights violations based on their disability and age. Since 2015, Human Rights Watch has documented the impact of armed conflict on children with disabilities in Afghanistan, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, the Gaza Strip in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen. While international human rights specifically call for the protection of children with disabilities in situations of armed conflict, the United Nations, governments, parties to the conflict and humanitarian actors have long neglected their specific rights and needs. There is an urgent need for the United Nations and governments to increase efforts to protect children with disabilities as part of their international commitments to protect all children impacted by hostilities. Their attention and investment in those most at risk of violence during armed conflicts will in turn enhance protection measures for everyone.


Language: en

Keywords

armed conflict; Children with disabilities; international human rights law; international humanitarian law; United Nations

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