Another cut in funding from the International Community will hit children in Syria and region the hardest

Source: Save The Children

BRUSSELS, 28 May 2024 – A further decrease in funding from the international community for Syria and the region following the eighth annual Brussels Conference will exacerbate rising child poverty and malnutrition, said Save the Children’s Syria Response Director, Rasha Muhrez.

 “Yesterday’s announcement of 3.9 billion Euros in pledged assistance for 2024 – a 15% drop from last year’s commitment – and 1.2 billion for 2025 is another worrying decline in support from the international community to Syria and refugee hosting countries in the region. 

Once again, we have seen words affirming the international community’s support for Syria, but too little in terms of funding to turn this commitment into reality for vulnerable Syrian children, absent any other funding mechanisms that would support the resilience of children and their families.

Of the 16.7 million people in need of humanitarian assistance inside Syria today – two-thirds of the population – about 45% of them are children. Child poverty is now endemic in Syria. We cannot tackle this without a significant scale up in humanitarian assistance, including efforts to prevent worsening malnutrition, supporting quality education services and investing in critical basic services. We cannot do more with less.   

In neighbouring countries vulnerabilities continue to mount, with an urgent need to address barriers to children’s survival, learning and ability to achieve their full potential.  In Iraq, challenges such as language barriers and limited resources continue to hinder children’s access to quality education. In countries like Lebanon, which is experiencing one of its worst financial and economic crises since the mid-19th century, the multi-layered crisis has further exacerbated the humanitarian needs of vulnerable populations, including Lebanese, migrants and refugees. 

To avoid condemning children to a future of hardship, insecurity and fear, more early recovery efforts are needed, in line with commitments from donors at the conference. This is the only way we can help Syrian families rebuild their lives and provide the future that Syrian children across the country deserve.” 

For further enquiries please contact: 

Randa Ghazy, Regional Media Manager for North Africa, the Middle East and Eastern Europe: Randa.Ghazy@savethechildren.org

Our media out of hours (BST) contact is media@savethechildren.org.uk / +44(0)7831 650409 

Please also check our Twitter account @Save_GlobalNews for news alerts, quotes, statements, and location Vlogs. 

SUDAN: Violent attacks on schools and education surge fourfold in one year of conflict

Source: Save The Children

KHARTOUM, 28 May 2024 – The number of violent attacks on schools and education in Sudan has increased fourfold since the start of the conflict in April last year with 88 reports of violent incidents and most schools now closed, according to Save the Children analysis released today.
These incidents include airstrikes on schools resulting in the killing and injury of students and teachers, torturing of teachers, killing and abduction of teachers and sexual violence against students inside education facilities. Other incidents included occupation of schools by armed groups, use of schools as weapons storage facilities, and battles fought on education premises.  
The analysis comes as the Education Cluster —a group of aid agencies, including Save the Children, who work on education in Sudan— warns that the country is on the brink of the worst education crisis in the world, with the majority of schools closed, leaving more than 18 million children of the country’s estimated 22 million children out of school for over a year now.    
For the analysis, Save the Children reviewed individual incidents of armed attacks or confrontations affecting education reported in the Armed Conflict Location & Event Database (ACLED) between April 2023 and April 2024 across Sudan and saw an alarming rise in attacks.  Twenty-three such incidents were recorded by ACLED in the 12 months before the conflict. 
The number of violent attacks on schools and education in Africa has been on the rise. In February, a similar analysis by Save the Children ahead of the 37th Ordinary Session of the Assembly of the Heads of State and Government of the African Union (AU) in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, showed  a rise in violence affecting schools, teachers and learners across Africa Union countries, with 411 cases reported, representing a 20% jump in 2023.  
In light of this trend, Save the Children is calling on leaders in Sudan and across the African Union to make schools safe places for children, having chosen education as “AU theme for 2024”, and committed to building resilient education systems for increased access to inclusive, lifelong, quality, and relevant learning in Africa.
Hadeer*, 13, was displaced with her family from Omdurman, Khartoum state, to Atbara, about 320 km northeast. She has three younger siblings. Her aunt and uncle were killed, and her nieces fled Sudan. Her family lost contact with her father in the chaos of the conflict.. Until Save the Children built a school in the camp for displaced people in Atbara, she never thought she would be able to study again.
She said: “I wish to be an architect when I grow up. At home we had facilities and electricity, and I could walk [to school] and study safely. But here I feel scared when I walk in the streets, not like there [home].
“Thank goodness we now live here, but it’s not as comfortable as our life in our house in Khartoum. We wish that what happened in Khartoum and other states does not happen here. The organisation [Save the Children] opened a school for us while we thought we would not have one. We are thankful that we now have a school and an opportunity to study again.”
Save the Children is calling for urgent political action at national, regional and international levels to end the fighting and bring about a locally led comprehensive peace process. The aid agency is also calling on all parties to the conflict to adhere to their obligations under international law, including guaranteeing humanitarian access and ensuring children are protected.
Dr. Arif Noor, Country Director for Save the Children in Sudan, said:
“It’s not just children’s lives that are on the line, but also their futures. Millions of children continue to face disruptions to their education with their schools destroyed by bombs, taken over as shelters for displaced families, or learning stopped as children flee.
“Sudan is a signatory to the Safe Schools Declaration, an inter-governmental political commitment to protect students, teachers, schools, and universities from the worst effects of armed conflict. We need to see action on this commitment so that education and children’s futures are protected from harm.”  
Sudan is facing one of the largest unfolding crises globally. About 25 million people, or half of the country’s population, need humanitarian assistance. [OCHA]
Save the Children has worked in Sudan since 1983, and is currently supporting children and their families across Sudan providing health, nutrition, education, child protection and food security and livelihoods support. Save the Children is also supporting refugees from Sudan in Egypt and South Sudan.
Notes to Editors:  
Save the Children searched the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data (ACLED) database for reported incidents of battles, looting, violent rioting, kidnappings, explosions/remote violence and non-peaceful protests concerning students, educational personnel and educational facilities. 
We filtered for entries that mentioned any of the following terms and their plurals: Student, pupil, school, teacher, education, classroom, headteacher, headmaster, headmistress, educational, college, university, academic, class, educator, janitor, caretaker. 
Figures will likely differ from the Global Coalition to Protect Education from Attack (GCPEA) count of attacks on education for Sudan due to differences in methodology.
For further enquiries please contact:
Delfhin Mugo, Delfhin.Mugo@savethechildren.org; 
Emily Wight, Emily.Wight@savethechildren.org; 
Aisha Majid, Aisha.Majid@savethechildren.org; 
Please also check our Twitter account @Save_GlobalNews for news alerts, quotes, statements and location Vlogs.

Bangladesh: Torrential rains turn villages into islands after Cyclone Remal batters coastal areas

Source: Save The Children

A building destroyed by Cyclone Remal in Bangladesh. Photo credit: Save the Children. More content available here
DHAKA, 27 MAY, 2024: Torrential rains and tidal surges have turned villages into islands after a severe cyclone tore through coastal areas of Bangladesh, leaving thousands of children and their families in need of assistance, said Save the Children.
Cyclone Remal brought heavy rain to the low-lying coast of Bangladesh on Sunday night and into Monday, with wind speeds gusting up to 135 kilometers (84 miles) per hour. Rising flood waters have turned many villages into islands after tidal surges broke through protective embankments, leaving entire communities stranded on higher ground.

Some 8.4 million people live in the path of the cyclone, according to local authorities, including about 3.6 million children. In the leadup to the storm, at least 800,000 people were evacuated into cyclone shelters in schools and mosques, with 78,000 volunteers  mobilised to assist with the relief effort.

Save the Children has sent four emergency response teams – including a medical team – to three districts to support in the recovery, and has aid stocks in place to help those most in need.

Heavy rain is continuing, with fears of landslides in the hilly Cox’s Bazar camps, home to nearly a million Rohingya refugees.  Many refugees live in flimsy shelters that are not built to withstand storms. Bangladesh is one of the countries most vulnerable [1] to the impacts of the climate crisis, with the Global Climate Risk Index classifying the low-lying country as the seventh most extreme disaster risk-prone country in the world in 2021.

Shumon Sengupta, Country Director, Save the Children in Bangladesh said:

“The impact of this severe cyclone shows yet again how vulnerable Bangladesh is to extreme weather events. In the last month, children have been baking in extreme heat – and now are having to cope with the impacts of widespread flooding and destruction caused by the cyclone. Schools that were closed due to the heatwave have now been closed again, with many turned into emergency shelters.  

“Many lives have been saved due to effective early warning and decisive action, including planning and preparation by the Bangladeshi authorities with decades of experience of responding to storms and flooding. Thousands of local volunteers worked tirelessly to ensure that the most vulnerable people were moved into cyclone shelters, but climate change is increasing the intensity and frequency of these events and jeopardising the rights and lives of children.

“ World leaders must tackle the underlying causes of such climate driven disasters, including urgently reducing warming temperatures and channelling funding and support to children and their families in Bangladesh to adapt, recover and rebuild their lives. Next week governments will meet in Bonn for a UN conference that includes for the first time a landmark “expert dialogue” on children and climate change. This needs to bring about increased recognition and understanding of the unique and disproportionate impacts of this crisis on children”.
Save the Children has been working in Bangladesh for more than 50 years. Together with government, civil society organizations and businesses we respond to major emergencies, deliver development programmes and ensure that children’s voices are heard through our campaigning to build a better future.

Notes to editors

[1] 

https://gain.nd.edu/our-work/country-index/rankings/We have spokespeople available in Bangladesh.

Multimedia content is available 

here

For interview requests and further information, please contact:

Rachel Thompson, Asia Pacific Regional Media Manager 

rachel.thompson@savethechildren.orgEmily Wight, Global Media Manager, Emily.Wight@savethechildren.orgOur media out of hours (BST) contact is media@savethechildren.org.uk / +44(0)7831 650409   

Please also check our Twitter account @Save_GlobalNews for news alerts, quotes, statements, and location Vlogs.

 

Afghanistan: Nearly three in ten children forecast to experience crisis levels of hunger in 2024

Source: Save The Children

Firoz*, who is 11 months old, being treated for malnutrition. Multimedia content is available here 
KABUL, 27 MAY, 2024 – About 6.5 million children in Afghanistan [1] – or nearly three out of ten – will face crisis or emergency levels of hunger this year as the country feels the immediate impacts of floods, the long term effects of drought and the return of Afghans from Pakistan and Iran, said Save the Children.  
New figures from the global hunger monitoring body, the IPC [2], forecast that 28% of the population – or about 12.4 million people – will face acute food insecurity before October. Of those, nearly 2.4 million are predicted to experience emergency levels of hunger, which is one level below famine.  
The figures show a slight improvement from the last report in October 2023, but underline the continuing need for assistance, with poverty affecting one in two Afghans.  
Torrential rain and flash floods in May in Northern Afghanistan have killed more than 400 people, destroyed or damaged thousands of homes and turned farmland to mud. Save the Children is operating a ‘clinic on wheels’ in Baghlan as part of its emergency response programme. The clinic includes male and female doctors, mental health and child protection specialists, as well mobile child friendly spaces. Children in the flood hit areas have limited access to clean water, with some reporting stomach problems to our health teams.    
An estimated 2.9 million children under the age of five are projected to suffer from acute malnutrition in 2024 [3]. Since the start of 2024, Save the Children’s health teams and clinics in Afghanistan have treated more than 7,000 children for malnutrition, among them 11 month old Firoz* who lives in Northern Afghanistan with his 10 brothers and sisters. His father is a farmer, but the 3-year-long drought has forced him to take on other work to support the family.   
Firoz’s* mother, Mariam*, said:  
‘ When my children are hungry, they become sad, and this affects me badly. I always wish they stayed healthy, and if any of them get sick, I become sad. We have some food, but it is not sufficient for everyone. We cannot afford it. There are days when we have a full meal, and on other days, we do not eat full [meals].’ 
Dr Nawid*, works for a Save the Children health team in Northern Afghanistan. He said:  
‘These people face financial problems. From an agricultural standpoint, they have land but don’t have water or adequate land for farming – they are jobless. These things affect children. When children are affected, they may not be able to go to school or may become busy working to find food for their homes. They become deprived of their rights or become ill and malnourished. All these problems are affecting children.’ 
The slight improvement in the numbers of children expected to experience acute hunger is linked to widespread humanitarian assistance and a projected improved harvest, among other factors – but food aid will decline this year due to funding cuts.  
More than 557,000 Afghans have returned from Pakistan since September 2023 [4] after Pakistan said all undocumented foreigners must leave the country voluntarily or face deportation. Nearly half of all the returnees are children.  Levels of hunger are predicted to increase this year in Jalalabad, a city where many of the returnees have settled and competition for jobs has increased. 
Arshad Malik, Country Director for Save the Children in Afghanistan, said:  
‘Save the Children has treated more than 7,000 children for severe or acute malnutrition so far this year. Those numbers are a sign of the massive need for continuing support for families as they experience shock after shock. Children are feeling the devastating impacts of 3 years of drought, high levels of unemployment and the return of more than 1.4 million Afghans from Pakistan and Iran [5]. We need long term, community-based solutions to help families rebuild their lives. 
‘The improvement in the number of people projected to experience acute levels of hunger this year is encouraging, but without increased support from the international community there is a danger that trend could be reversed. Only 16% of funding for this year’s humanitarian response plan has so far been met [6] – but nearly half the population needs assistance. This is not the time for the world to look away.’  
Save the Children has been supporting communities and protecting children’s rights across Afghanistan since 1976, including during periods of conflict and natural disasters. We have programmes in nine provinces and work with partners in an additional seven provinces. Since August 2021, we’ve been scaling up our response to support the increasing number of children in need. We deliver health, nutrition, education, child protection, shelter, water, sanitation and hygiene, and livelihood support.   
NOTES TO EDITORS 
*denotes name changed to protect identity 
We have spokespeople available in Afghanistan.  
Multimedia content is available here 
For interview requests and further information, please contact:  
Our media out of hours (BST) contact is media@savethechildren.org.uk / +44(0)7831 650409     
Please also check our Twitter account @Save_GlobalNews for news alerts, quotes, statements, and location Vlogs.    

MEDIA RELEASE: InsideOut Hide Inappropriate Award-Winning Poem

Source: Family First

InsideOut has tried to ‘hide’ poetry that won an award as part of Out on the Shelves because many people on social media said that there were potentially underlying themes of sexual innuendo, incest and self-harm.

The poem entitled “Father and Son” was the winner of the Under-16 Poetry section. Despite the supposed theme of smoking, when it was shared on Facebook and users were asked for their opinion on its appropriateness, many parents were horrified by the underlying themes running through it.

Significantly, since being publicised, the poem has been withdrawn from the InsideOut website. These are poems and stories that are recommended to all school students, including primary school.

Problematic lines include “we hastily pull ‘it’ out of our trousers”, “turning the Jesus portrait face-down”, “as it bobs between our lips”, “excess spits out on our dewlaps”, “as the cardinal sin leaves our busted lips in a long, languid, stream of white”, “Two light bringers who’s rather hide in the dark: Father and Son”, “hide the moon shaped marks that still burn against my skin”.

Another award winner in a separate older section talks about a trans ‘recipe’ involving pronouns, binding, and “their sh*t taste buds”.

Other books recommended as part of the campaign for primary age children are also problematic.

  • I’m Not a Girl is about a transgender girl;
  • My Shadow is Purple considers gender beyond binary in a vibrant spectrum of colour;
  • This Is Our Rainbow includes a story about a tween girl navigating a crush on her friend’s mum;
  • The Every Body Book – “When babies are born, one of the first questions people ask is whether the baby is a boy or a girl. They are actually asking about the biological sex of the baby. Biological sex is assigned or labelled, when babies are born, based on the visible parts they have.
  • Alice Austen Lived Here – “Sam is very in touch with their own queer identity. They’re nonbinary, and their best friend, TJ, is nonbinary as well. Sam’s family is very cool with it…”

The Ministry of Education, as part of Pride Week in schools next month, is also recommending a School Journal story entitled Break-Up Day by  transgender author Kyle Mewburn which chronicles his discovery in year 8 that nobody realised he was actually a girl and was in the wrong body – “a girl in a boy-shaped box”.

A recent poll by Curia Market Research found there is strong opposition to gender ideology being taught to young children. Only 15% think primary age children should be taught they can choose their gender and that it can be changed through hormone treatment and surgery if they want it to be, while more than two out of three (69%) say they shouldn’t. Opposition to gender ideology has grown significantly from a similar poll in 2019 where only 54% said children should not be taught this, and 35% said they should.

As with most of the content of InsideOut in schools, when parents are made aware of the nature of the content, they quickly become concerned. It is disturbing that the Ministry of Education is promoting this material also. It is time that the coalition Government delivered on their promise of removing InsideOut material and gender ideology from schools.

I am safe and they are not – The anguished reality of a Palestinian in Egypt

Source: Save The Children

Hani* (28) is a Palestinian from Gaza who is stranded in Cairo and volunteers with Save the Children. Sacha Myers / Save the Children

For a long time, I was hiding in my room. I didn’t want to see or talk to anyone. The guilt that I was safe in Egypt while my entire family was in Gaza – displaced and desperate for food and water – was unbearable.

I had gone to Egypt for a holiday and to see friends in Cairo. While I was away, the war started, and I became stranded overnight.

Through brief phone conversations with my family over the past 219 days of war, I’ve followed their treacherous journey as they’ve fled from city to city, from house to house, trying to outrun the bombs.

They’re attempting to hide the situation from me, to protect me from the horrors they’re experiencing, but they really cannot hide it anymore. I know most people are living in tents. The living conditions are awful, even in a tent or in a house. I know water is only available one to two times a week at most, that food is scarce in the markets, and healthcare and medications are almost impossible to find.

{cta | The situation in Gaza is catastrophic. Children have nowhere safe to go. Your support is urgently needed. | https://donate.savethechildren.org/en/donate/children-crisis-donate-child-emergency-fund| Donate now}

There’s no electricity and there’s cuts all the time. To communicate, they have to go a very long distance to charge their phones and to get network coverage. The internet is also unreliable, and it makes communication hard. It always takes several steps before I manage to reach them.

What’s hit me hardest is the change in my youngest brother, Ahmed*, who is 16. Before the war, he was preparing for school exams and mapping out his career path. He was playing with other kids in the street and gaming with his friends, just like any normal child his age.

I asked for a photo of him, and it took a long time before my family had enough connection to send it. I was shocked when I saw the photo. The war has changed him, and he’s lost a lot of weight. He’s taken on a large amount of responsibility to provide for the family and to support them. It’s too much responsibility for a child who should be in school. This war has added 10 years to the age of every child in Gaza.

I want to go back to my family. I know it’s madness to want to return to a war zone, but as the oldest son, I feel the responsibility to protect my family. And I cannot protect them while I’m in Cairo. But my family refuses. They tell me they take comfort in knowing at least one member of their family will survive. They tell me no one can withstand what’s happening in Gaza.

I’m struggling with my mental health. I’m not afraid to say this. I’m just one of many Palestinians in Egypt who struggle with the enormous guilt of being safe, and the endless fear about what will happen to our loved ones. It’s a special kind of anguish that eats at you and never leaves you.

The past weeks have been some of the hardest times. My family was sheltering in Rafah – along with more than 1 million other Palestinians – when the Israeli forces intensified attacks on the city and issued relocation orders for civilians.

My family fled, along with thousands of other people fleeing to already crowded areas where resources are almost non-existent. I lost contact with them for a number of days, and the panic I felt was unbearable. I eventually heard from them, and I cannot describe the relief I felt.

Hani* (28) is a Palestinian volunteer with Save the Children in EgyptSacha Myers / Save the Children

I also get a sense of relief from volunteering with Save the Children. I can’t directly support anyone in Gaza, but I can take an active role in helping people from Gaza who are now in Cairo. I know what they’re going through, so I know what support they need. Helping them makes me feel useful, and it gives me a purpose. Now, each morning, I get up early and go out and meet people and help people. I don’t stay in bed unable to face the day.

We have a saying in Gaza: “we shall rebuild. I hope this for my country and my people. I hope for everyone to be reunited with their families. I hope I’ll be reunited with my family too.

I can’t wait to be back in Gaza, and for my mum to be calling me on the phone, telling me to come home from work and to have dinner with my family. 

You can support our response in Gaza by donating today to our Children’s Emergency Fund.

EU adopts historic Directive requiring large companies to focus on children’s rights

Source: Save The Children

Photo:Tom Merilion/Save The Children

BRUSSELS, 24 May 2024 – Large companies operating in the European Union will have to take child rights into consideration when they carry out due diligence processes in their global supply chains or face penalties under a landmark Directive adopted by the EU, Save the Children said.

The new Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD/CS3D), adopted today and likely to come into force next month, will allow children who have been negatively affected by a company’s business practices to take them to court, even if they live outside of the EU.

The Directive will apply to EU and non-EU/third country-based companies with over 1,000 employees and with a turnover of more than 450 million euro [1] and companies would be liable for fines for breaching the Directive. It will be legally binding and incorporated into the national laws of all EU Member States over the next two years.

The Directive includes the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UN CRC) in its Annex, an inclusion which was advocated by Save the Children, and means a company’s environmental and human rights due diligence will need to take in to account children’s rights [2]. For over two years now Save the Children has been calling for the Directive to be as effective as possible in protecting the rights of children.

Vasilka Lalevska, Child Rights and Corporate Sustainability Advisor for Save the Children’s Child Rights and Business Global Hub, said:

“The Directive is highly significant as it marks a shift from sustainability rules being voluntary to mandatory.  Large companies will have a legal obligation to carry out human rights and environmental due diligence and take effective action, and those who fail to do so will face penalties.

“The Directive could have a substantial impact on the lives of children, in a year marking the centenary of the Geneva Declaration of the Rights of the Child [3], when children’s rights were first recognised.

“With millions of children around the world facing extreme weather events, poverty and conflict, which threaten their safety, wellbeing and futures, it has never been more critical that companies play a role in upholding children’s rights. The adoption of the Directive is also timely, with the European elections taking place next month it’s also important that children’s rights remain a focus of the EU’s political agenda.”

Save the Children said it would continue to follow and participate in all relevant steps related to the implementation of the Directive. Save the Children will also continue to support companies to assess and strengthen their due diligence practices from a child rights perspective including to advance their strategies towards more sustainable investments in communities they source from.

ENDS

Notes to editor

[1] With both employee and turnover thresholds applying to EU companies; and turnover threshold only applying to non-EU companies. The Directive also applies to parent companies of groups fulfilling the thresholds as well as companies entering franchising/licensing agreements in return for royalties of over 22,5 million EUR with a turnover of more than 80 million EUR.

[2] More details regarding this and other Save the Children´s positions on the CSDDD are available here

[3] The founder of Save the Children, Eglantyne Jebb, wrote the Geneva Declaration of the Rights of the Child, a critical document outlining the unique rights of children. The Geneva Declaration was endorsed by the League of Nations in 1924 and this year marks its 100th anniversary of affirming the universality of children’s rights.

*******************************************************************************************************************

For further enquiries please contact:

We can offer Vasilka Lalevska, Save the Children’s Child Rights and Corporate Sustainability Advisor, based in Stockholm.

Children to tell Inter-American Court of Human Rights how climate change is affecting them in historic hearing

Source: Save The Children

Joselim, 17, from Peru, will tell the Inter-American Court of Human Rights how climate change is negatively affecting the rights of children across the region. Photo by Save the Children. More content available here
Content available here
BRASILIA, 24 May 2024 – Two teenage girls will give first-hand accounts on how climate change is negatively impacting the rights of children during a historic hearing in Brazil today, drawing on their own experiences and discussions with peers across the Americas.  
Joselim, 17, from Peru, and Camila, 14, from El Salvador, will tell the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) how the climate crisis is depriving them of their rights as outlined in the Convention of the Rights of the Child, such as education, survival and development.  
They will tell the Court how extreme weather such as heatwaves and heavy rain is decimating agriculture and driving up food prices, contributing to a health and nutrition crisis in children and families. They will also highlight how the impacts of climate change can disrupt learning for children, with increasingly adverse weather conditions such as floods and landslides preventing children from getting to school.  
The hearing forms part of the second phase of an historic inquiry which started last year and was instigated by Colombia and Chile, which asked the court to set out what legal responsibilities states have to tackle climate change and to stop it breaching people’s human rights.  
This “advisory opinion” could be highly influential, setting the framework for future legal action.  
Joselim, 17, said:   ”Looking after Mother Earth is urgent because time is against us. Children, adolescents, young adults, and humanity in general should enjoy a healthy, clean, dignified, and safe environment. This requires change to rebuild a conscious society, in which children and adolescents are active participants. We should take care of the earth we live on and preserve humanity. My call to action for authorities is to respect our Mother Earth, preserve it, and take care of it.  
“We need leaders to invest in the recovery of agriculture, in education, and in environmental plans and public policies with adequate resources and personnel. We need them to promote recycling, using renewable energy, and adopting agricultural production techniques that are friendlier to nature so that more children and adolescents can enjoy a healthy, clean, and safe environment.  
Camila,14, said: “The Court must listen to and learn from children and adolescents about how we are living through the climate crisis and its impact on our rights. Climate change is affecting our right to health in many ways, for example, causing deaths and illnesses from extreme heat waves, storms, and floods, toxic air pollution, droughts, food shortages, the spread of diseases like cholera and dengue fever, and serious infections from increased animal diseases that are transmitted to people. All this, in turn, generates poverty and displacement.” 
Camila will also stress the urgent need for leaders to address the adverse impacts of the climate crisis on health systems by investing in improving health infrastructure and making healthcare more accessible to people in rural and remote communities.   
Today’s hearing is taking place following the submission to the Court of an Amicus Curiae brief in which an organisation can set out legal arguments and recommendations. This was initiated by child-led networks, Molacnnats and Red Latinoamericana de Niñas, Niños y Adolescentes (REDNNyAs), both of which are partners of Save the Children. The process was also technically supported by Peruvian organisation Peruvian Society of SPDA and facilitated by Save the Children through its regional civil society strengthening programme.
It follows months of consultations with children across the region on how their rights are being eroded by the impacts of climate change and on the measures that States should adopt to protect human rights in the face of the climate crisis, with special emphasis on the right to health, education, adequate food and recreation. These views will be incorporated into the speeches given by Joselim and Camila today.  
Victoria Ward, Regional Director for Save the Children in Latin America and the Caribbean, said:  
Climate change is mostly affecting those who are least responsible for the damage – children. Those children already facing hunger and conflict, poverty and discrimination are suffering most of all. 
“Across Latin America and the Caribbean, we have recently seen unprecedented heatwaves and droughts that have forced schools to close, and caused long-lasting damage to crop and agriculture that is sending food prices skyrocketing and pushing families into poverty. Brazil has also experienced its worst flooding in 80 years that has displaced more than 580,000 people from their homes.  
“Children are demanding change. Their powerful experiences and solutions will only make the fight against climate change stronger. And we know that the only way adults can truly protect children’s rights is by including children in making decisions that affect them. That’s why it’s fantastic to see Joselim and Camila using this platform to speak out about how the climate crisis is eroding the rights of children across the region. Let’s hope they are listened to.” 
In Latin America and the Caribbean and across the world, Save the Children is working with governments to find ways to increase funding for climate policies and actions that protect children’s rights.  
Save the Children works with, and for children, putting their rights and views first, and supporting them to tell their governments and human rights bodies how their lives are impacted by climate change and environmental degradation, so those accountable understand their obligations to children.  
Save the Children is implementing climate programmes in over 50 countries worldwide and delivering direct climate action – from working with communities to adapt to climate changes impacting them now, to forecasting future emergencies and strengthening communities’ ability to anticipate, adapt, prepare, respond, and recover.  
NOTES TO EDITORS:  
The Inter-American Court is one of the three regional courts for the protection of human rights, along with the European Court of Human Rights and the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights. It was set up in 1979 to interpret and apply the American convention on human rights, and its jurisdiction is accepted by around 20 states, including most Latin American countries and several Caribbean islands. 
As well as seeking clarity on children’s rights, this request also asks the Inter-American court of human rights to look into how the crisis is impacting  women’s rights, and tackling loss and damage, with recognition that communities in lower income countries are experiencing the impacts of the climate crisis acutely, having done the least to contribute to global emissions and warming temperatures. 
Content available here
For further enquiries please contact:
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EGYPT: Palestinian children who fled Gaza’s war haunted by nightmares and anxiety

Source: Save The Children

Rami* (7) and his father Jamal* (35) both suffered blast injuries in Gaza. [Save the Children/Sacha Myers]

CAIRO, 23 May 2024 – Palestinian children who fled to Egypt from the war in Gaza are haunted by the horrors they experienced and are struggling with nightmares, anger, bedwetting and anxiety, with Save the Children calling for an urgent increase in mental health and psychosocial support. 

Since the war started in Gaza on 7 October more than 60,000 Palestinians, including over 5,500 medical evacuees, have crossed the border into Egypt seeking refuge and healthcare. 

In the past three months, Save the Children has received more than 500 requests from Palestinians in Egypt for mental health and psychosocial support. Almost 90% of these requests were for children, with parents concerned that their children are still triggered by loud noises, cannot sleep or even go to the toilet alone or are withdrawn and not showing any signs of emotion.  

Prolonged exposure to war and uncertainty can cause a state of ‘toxic shock’ but children in conflict show remarkable resilience and can recover with appropriate assistance such as mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS), child friendly spaces where they can play,  and education programmes.   

Waleed*, 66,  from Gaza,  now lives with his wife and five of their children in Cairo. His children have lost cousins and other loved ones in the war and their mother says they were always asking who was going to be the first one of them to die.  

 Waleed said although he’s tried to help his children, they still need more support to recover:  

[The war has] impacted my children’s mental health. While they were fleeing and being displaced, it was so dangerous, and there were many threats to their lives and a lot of bombs, which made our children anxious and afraid. When they came to Egypt, they were in a very bad state and needed psychological support and I tried to help them out. But it’s really hard.  

Here in Egypt the children in the street play with fireworks, and when my children hear the fireworks, it makes them feel afraid and freak out when they hear the sounds. It triggers them. There are sounds of planes around here and when they hear the plane, they freeze.” 

Heba*, 28, lives in an apartment in Cairo with her husband and three children Rami* (7), Sana* (10) and Samira* (12), who were all severely injured in an airstrike in Gaza. 

Heba* says her son Rami, who suffered injuries to his head as well as his leg, is now scared of everything: 

Rami was actually known for always being really brave and he always used to comfort the family. But ever since he got injured, he’s turned into a child who fears any noise, the darkness, he can’t go to the bathroom alone and he can’t be alone

Ever since the war, the girls have had higher heart rates and are scared and think death is just around the corner. Even when we were driving from the border to Cairo… Samira experienced nightmares and she woke up thinking that we were dead and that everything had been destroyed.”  

The closure of the Rafah crossing with Egypt has completely halted medical evacuation of patients since 7 May. About 600 patients scheduled to be evacuated are currently unable to move. Between October 2023 and 18 May, there has been 12,760 requests for medical evacuations to Egypt and other countries. 

Laila Toema, a psychologist and Save the Children Mental Health and Psychosocial Support Technical Advisor in Egypt, said:  

Children from Gaza have suffered unimaginable mental harm from the violence, serious physical injuries, including the loss of body parts, and the loss of families, homes, and their schools. They are also tortured by the uncertainty of not knowing where their loved ones in Gaza are and what will happen to them. Living under this kind of stress for so long is enough to destroy anyone’s health, both physical and mental. 

“Despite what they have experienced, children are resilient, and we know from experience in Egypt and in many other countries around the world that they can recover when we provide them with support to access medical assistance to treat their physical injuries, and help to regain a sense of stability, normalcy and safety. Save the Children is calling for an urgent increase of international support to address the short and long-term needs for displaced Palestinian children in Egypt, especially for mental health and psychosocial support services.”

”In Gaza, children continue to be maimed and suffer physical injuries, with little option for medical care or treatment, and their mental health is being pushed beyond breaking point. It’s estimated that more than 1 million children are in desperate need of mental health services. We call for an immediate ceasefire to save children’s lives and future.” 

Save the Children is working with Egyptian authorities to provide essential services for displaced Palestinians including cash assistance, support to cover medical costs and mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS). The MHPSS activities include group and one-on-one counselling for children and their caregivers, training Palestinians in Egypt to provide community-based psychosocial support to newly arrived Palestinians from Gaza and providing MHPSS training to Egyptian ambulance staff so they can better support child medical evacuees.  

Save the Children is also supporting the health authorities, including ambulances and public hospitals receiving medical evacuees from Gaza, through providing baby incubators and other essential medical supplies and equipment. It is also preparing to train frontline health workers on responding to paediatric blast injuries and mass casualties. Save the Children’s Gaza response in Egypt is done through partnering with the Egyptian Ministry of Health and with the support of Community Jameel and the Canadian Humanitarian Coalition Fund. 

 

For further enquiries please contact: 

Randa Ghazy, Regional Media Manager for North Africa, the Middle East and Eastern Europe: Randa.Ghazy@savethechildren.org

Our media out of hours (BST) contact is media@savethechildren.org.uk / +44(0)7831 650409 

Please also check our Twitter account @Save_GlobalNews for news alerts, quotes, statements, and location Vlogs. 

 

More than half of Pakistan’s school age children will be out of school due to extreme heat

Source: Save The Children

ISLAMABAD, 23 May 2024 – More than half of Pakistan’s school age children – about 26 million – will be locked out of classrooms for a week due to an ongoing heat wave, the latest in a string of countries to shut down education due to climate extremes, Save the Children said.

At least 26 million[1] children in Pakistan’s most populous province, Punjab –  or 52 percent* of the country’s total number of pupils in pre-primary, primary and secondary education – will be out of school from 25 to 31 May.

Punjab’s education department said a surge in temperatures and a prolonged heat wave in the province had prompted the authorities to shut all schools but added that schools will be ‘allowed to conduct examinations as scheduled’.
Temperatures in parts of the north and northwest of Pakistan will be 4-6 °C ‘higher than normal’ for the rest of the week,[2] according to Pakistan’s Meteorological Department.
Pakistan is the latest in a string of countries to shut schools because of extreme heat. Bangladesh and the Philippines also closed schools last month as the mercury soared, while in South Sudan schools were shut for two weeks.
Climate and environmental threats are responsible for the disruption of the education of over 37 million children each year[3] and heat has a significant impact on education, with students showing lower levels of achievement during hot school years.
In East Asia and the Pacific, around 243 million children are exposed to hotter and longer heatwaves[4], putting their health and their education at risk.
Pakistan faces rates of warming considerably above the global average with a potential rise of 1.3°C–4.9°C by the 2090s[5] and the frequency of extreme climate events in Pakistan is projected to increase as well, putting strain on urban dwellers and outdoor laborers in Pakistan with increased risk of heat-related sickness and even death.
Rose*, 12, who studies at a Save the Children-supported child-friendly space in Walidad Chandio, Sindh province, said:
“We came to the Save the Children-supported child-friendly space in morning and our teachers oriented all the children on the hot weather and how to save ourselves in this heat. They also told us to seek shelter and drink lot of water and not to play during afternoon in open spaces exposed to sunlight.”
Muhammad Khuram Gondal, Save the Children’s Country Director in Pakistan, said:
“Prolonged exposure to intense heat impacts children’s ability to learn and to concentrate and this puts their education at risk. Excess heat is also potentially lethal to children. We live at a time when the effect of climate change is all around us and it is undeniable that we need immediate and long-term solutions and support from the international community and world governments to effectively mitigate climate change for now and for future generations.”
In Sindh province Save the Children, in collaboration with the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) Sindh, has initiated a heatwave emergency response to raise awareness among communities, including children, about precautions to take during the heatwave. Save the Children is also leading a social media campaign to raise awareness about the risks associated with extreme heat.
As of April 30, 2024, Save the Children has provided humanitarian assistance to at least 1 million people, including more than 520,000 children, through life-saving activities in districts affected by the climate crisis.
Save the Children has been working in Pakistan since 1979 and has reached at least 14 million beneficiaries, including children, through programmes in health and nutrition, education, child protection, livelihoods and through our humanitarian response programmes.
*Name changed to protect anonymity.
  1. https://blogs.worldbank.org/en/endpovertyinsouthasia/bringing-13-million-more-children-school-lessons-punjab
  2. Government of the Punjab School Education Department notification 21 May.
  3. Pakistan Metrological Department: https://twitter.com/pmdgov
  4. https://resourcecentre.savethechildren.net/pdf/born-into-the-climate-crisis.pdf/
  5. https://www.unicef.org/eap/press-releases/sweltering-heat-across-east-asia-and-pacific-puts-childrens-lives-risk-unicef
  6. World Bank Pakistan country profile.
For further information, please contact:
Our media out of hours (BST) contact is media@savethechildren.org.uk / +44(0)7831 650409