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International Conference on War-Affected Children, Winnipeg, Canada,
September 10-17, 2000.
Note: the Conference was divided into three sections - a Youth Meeting
(September 10-12), an Experts & NGOs Meeting (September 13-15), and a
Ministerial Meeting, opening to delegates from the other sections (September
16-17).
Address by Canadian Foreign Minister
Address by Canadian Foreign Minister Lloyd Axworthy, September 16;
Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs text (2000/33).
"This conference in Winnipeg is like the final leg of a long relay race. This
is not a bad comparison as the world focuses its attention on Sydney, where
youth from around the world are celebrating the Olympic ideal and striving to be
better than even the best. But the baton in this race is nothing less than the
future and it has been handed to us by the world's children - tens of millions
of them.
These children, suffering the ravages of war, have challenged us to break the
old records and to set a new standard for international behaviour, action and
compassion in dealing with war-affected children. Of course, people have been
around this track before and the route is well marked... But this lap is for us
- the senior political leaders and ministers - to run. The course is clear: from
Winnipeg in September 2000 to New York and the UN General Assembly's Special
Session on Children in 2001. We cannot drop this baton. We cannot lose this
opportunity. We cannot let the ideals and the hopes that are focussed on our
effort here become victim to fatigue or complacency. There is simply too much at
stake.
The past six days have been a steady crescendo of activity, building dynamic
partnerships between youth, experts and officials toward the common goal of
action. There has not been a lot of understatement around this room in the past
week. War-affected children were clear about what needs to be done.
Non-governmental organizations doing program delivery in the field, operating in
complex and often horrific humanitarian environments, know what must be done.
Now it is time for us to take what has come out of these meetings and do our job
by turning that into public policy. Our task here is to develop and discuss a
bold and realistic framework for action:
- Most immediately, we need to undertake efforts to gain the release of
war-abducted children and child soldiers. Our duty in government is to use our
resources, our reputation and our reach to achieve freedom for these children.
We can lead and support efforts to free child abductees. This includes living up
to our own national obligations, taking determined and ongoing bilateral and
multilateral initiatives.
- We should commit to strengthening our international obligations and work
through our bilateral relationships and multilateral institutions to achieve the
120 signatures and 60 ratifications to the Rome Statute of the ICC
[International Criminal Court] before December. And in time for the Special
Session in 2001, we should build on the 69 signatures and 3 ratifications of the
Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on Involvement of
Children in Armed Conflict. This includes funding a ratification campaign, as
Canada has done.
- As donors, we can fund programs on child advocacy and protection, like those
Canada has, where we tap our nationals...to work overseas promoting children's
safety and development.
- We should commit to improving the capacity of our international
institutions, especially the UN, to deal with crises such as those affecting
children. Utilizing the UN is a wise decision, especially if we give it the
capacity it requires. It is a natural fit given the new spirit to deal with
these sorts of issues, which seems to be infusing the
organization.
This is not an exhaustive list but an important place
from which to start. If this conference - this movement for children - is to be
a success, we must assume our place at the fore of this agenda. This means
holding individuals accountable for their actions. Ending impunity is what we
can do that no one else can. We have the influence and the tools to make those
who violate basic human decency accountable for their actions. We can also begin
taking greater responsibility for children's rights. This means starting to come
to terms with some of the most difficult issues on the international agenda and
rethinking the concepts that we had taken as givens for so long - even the
notion of unquestioned sovereignty. ...
There are important items coming out of Winnipeg. We must take these issues
to the cabinet table; we must fight for the resources to implement these
commitments; we must instruct our officials to take positions in international
forums that advance the agenda for children; and we must better help the UN
manage our new global agenda. ... Our challenge is to work at home, bilaterally
and multilaterally, so that we arrive in New York next September with a bold and
substantive action plan - with better records ourselves and commitments and
undertakings that we will end abductions, and that make children an
international priority."
Address by UNICEF Executive Director
Address by Carol Bellamy, Executive Director of the United Nations
Children's Fund (UNICEF), Winnipeg, September 13.
"[T]his Conference is convening at a pivotal moment. As you know, the
Security Council recently approved its second Resolution on children and
conflict in less than a year - and in so doing, the Council has emphatically
elevated the issue to a central position on the UN's peace and security agenda.
Moreover, I am pleased to note that our deliberations here in Winnipeg will be
informed and immeasurably enriched by a new report by Graça Machel on The
Impact of Armed Conflict on Children. It is a document that reviews the
progress made and obstacles encountered since 1996, when the first, definitive
Machel Report was submitted to the General Assembly - a landmark document that
not only raised global awareness, but helped pave the way for steps to halt the
appalling suffering that is still endured by so many children in so many
countries. ...
What we hope from this meeting is that its participants - distinguished
experts in the field of children and armed conflict - will address the crisis in
strong and inspiring ways, and that you find ways to ensure that your words
become deeds, deeds that make a real difference to the lives of children. Over
the years, conferences the world over have made promises to children. Promises,
made in good faith, to ease suffering and end exploitation - and to protect
children from the loss of the childhood, from rape and mutilation and
recruitment as child soldiers. Yet time and time again - in such places as
Rwanda, in Sierra Leone, in Sudan, in Afghanistan, in Kosovo and East Timor -
cruelty and indifference has prevailed. ...
[W]e need to produce recommendations on small arms and landmines and child
soldiers. ... We need to talk of accountability and impunity and training. And
we must find effective ways to promote peace-building and conflict prevention.
There must be a recognition that, when it comes to the suffering of children in
conflict areas, there are no innocent bystanders. All of us are responsible -
and the commitments and recommendations that you will produce here in Winnipeg
must be addressed to all sectors of society: to governments, to rebel groups, to
the private sector, civil society, and to UN and regional organizations. Let me
quickly highlight three key ideas that UNICEF hopes to see reflected in
the...outcome of this Winnipeg Conference as a whole:
First, we all recognize and accept that too many of the promises made to
children have been broken and have not been fulfilled and respected. It is time
to fix those promises. It is time to usher in the 'era of application' that the
Secretary-General Kofi Annan referred to in his recent Report to the Security
Council on children. And we can only do this by focusing relentlessly on all
those who violate children's rights or collude in such violations. Whether they
be governments or rebel groups, manufacturers of, or dealers in, weapons of war,
unscrupulous businessmen - all of them must be made to feel the repugnance of
civilized people everywhere. They must be shamed, disgraced and held accountable
for their actions. Moreover, we must ensure that our recommendations here are
specific, concrete, action-oriented - and rooted in the Convention on the Rights
of the Child and other international standards.
Let me give you an example. We all know that we must eliminate the appalling
practice of recruiting children. But it is not enough to call on parties to
conflict not to recruit children. We must also identify concrete actions. These
include ensuring that all states ratify the Optional Protocol specifying 18 as
the minimum age for voluntary recruitment; that Governments forego from selling
arms to any combatants who recruit children; that the Security Council impose
arms embargoes on those who recruit children; that NGOs monitor the behaviour of
parties to conflict and report on incidents of recruitment; that donors and
humanitarian agencies support education and vocational training to youth in
conflict zones to provide an alternative to recruitment; and that companies
develop voluntary codes of conduct concerning trade, including in armaments and
natural resources, with parties to conflicts who are responsible for gross
violations of child rights. ...
Second point: For a long time, education received little attention from the
humanitarian community. It was not seen as a life-saving initiative like health
and nutritional rehabilitation. But we now recognize the crucial importance of
education to child survival and development - even in the midst of conflict.
Education provides an environment of relative stability and normalcy for
children amid the instability and unpredictability of war. It provides them with
an opportunity to learn so that they have a chance to gain at least some of the
most basic skills that will allow them to work, to contribute to society and in
time to support their own families. And education offers an alternative to
recruitment. So I very much hope that the Conference will strongly endorse the
pivotal role of education - and that Governments will respond to this with more
support. And in this connection, let me say how grateful we are to the
Government of Canada for its assistance, which has included Canadian $700,000
for UNICEF child-protection programmes in Sierra Leone. ...
Finally, as I mentioned earlier, Graça Machel's Report makes some vitally
important recommendations, recommendations that I urge you to endorse and
support. Among the issues that she raises is that of HIV/AIDS. As the Report
says, and I quote: 'Over the past five years, HIV/AIDS has become the single
most powerful new factor compounding the dangers for children in a conflict. The
chaotic and brutal circumstances of war aggravate all of the factors that fuel
the HIV/AIDS pandemic.'
All of the Report's recommendations on this issue are important. But I do
want to highlight one since it also links to my previous point on education -
'Schools and educational systems should be the centrepiece for HIV/AIDS
awareness, prevention and care during emergencies, including expanded life
skills curricula that offer nutritional support, hygiene and other domestic
survival skills.' ..."
Review of the Machel Report
'Graça Machel calls for an end to impunity for war crimes against women
and children,' UNICEF Press Release, September 13.
"Graça Machel, the former first lady of Mozambique and South Africa, today
called on the international community to develop a new sense of urgency in
protecting children affected by armed conflict. Releasing the first major review
of global progress since her ground-breaking 1996 study, The Impact of Armed
Conflict on Children, Ms. Machel said that despite laudable efforts by
various governments, national and international groups and UN agencies, no one
has done enough or moved quickly enough to safeguard the millions of children
suffering through wars. 'Power and greed can never be an excuse for sacrificing
children,' Ms. Machel said as she released her report today in Winnipeg, Canada.
'In tolerating this scourge of war against children, every one of us becomes
complicit in the violence and harm inflicted upon them,' she said.
The review highlights significant achievements of the last four years,
including new measures to protect children from military recruitment and to
prosecute and punish war crimes against children and women. It also describes
the increased importance and emphasis on education as the fourth pillar of
humanitarian relief, joining food, health care and shelter. Yet the report finds
that serious violations against children continue. An estimated 300,000 children
under 18 are participating in conflicts - fighting on the front lines, abused as
sex slaves or used for portering. At least 20 million children have been
uprooted from their homes due to conflict. More than 2 million children have
been killed in the wars of the 1990s, and millions more have died from
war-induced malnutrition and disease. In fact, of the 10 countries with the
highest death rates of children under five, seven are affected by armed
conflict.
More than a dozen critical issues are outlined in Ms. Machel's report. It
calls HIV/AIDS the most powerful new threat facing children in conflict-affected
countries and appeals for urgent measures to address the compound impact of AIDS
and war on children. ... Overall, Ms. Machel's review conveys a growing sense of
impatience at the continued harm inflicted on children through armed conflict,
saying that 'humankind has yet to declare childhood inviolate or spare children
the pernicious effects of war.' She maintains however, that 'children present us
with a uniquely compelling motivation for mobilization. Our collective failure
to protect children must be transformed into an opportunity to confront the
problems that cause their suffering.'
The review, an independent study financed by the Canadian and Norwegian
Governments, is a key resource document for the International Conference on
War-Affected Children underway this week in Winnipeg. Its preparation was
supported by the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) and UNICEF.
It contains specific recommendations for the international community on a wide
range of issues affecting children in war - including child soldiers, HIV/AIDS,
landmines and small arms, sexual violence, and humanitarian assistance. It calls
for a halt to the imposition of comprehensive sanctions, pointing to the
overwhelming evidence of their damage to children. The review also identifies
several overarching themes, such as ending impunity for those who commit crimes
against children, ensuring that children are central to peace-making, and
strengthening mechanisms for monitoring and reporting violations of children's
rights. ...
UNIFEM Executive Director Dr. Noeleen Heyzer...praised the review, saying:
'Graça Machel highlights what we already know but continue to neglect - that
women and children suffer disproportionately during armed conflict. In the case
of women and girls especially, humanitarian responses are inadequate and
sometimes inappropriate.' Dr. Heyzer welcomed the attention to the important
role of women in peace-building. 'This groundbreaking review shows how the
international community can ensure that this crucial resource - women - are at
the foundation of all efforts to build peace and resolve conflicts.'"
Disarmament Diplomacy, Issue No. 50, September 2000
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