Monday, January 10, 2011

Violence against children rises by 9.2%: SPARC data

Source: Express Tribune

Date: January 10, 2011

KARACHI: Violence against children increased by 9.2 per cent in Sindh, according to the data collected by the Society for the Protection of the Rights of the Child (Sparc), an NGO working for children’s rights in Pakistan.

The figures released by the NGO show that in 2010, a total of 2,689 children were subjected to various forms of violence in just Sindh.

Sohail Abro, Sparc provincial manager, believes that the poor prosecution system in Pakistan has a major role to play in this increase. “The perpetrators never get punished and they manage to escape using the loopholes in the law,” he said. He pointed out that except for the legislation on child rights in Khyber-Pukhtunkhwa — the Child Protection and Welfare Act, 2010 — no concrete steps were taken towards children’s rights in Sindh, or the rest of the country for that matter.

These figures reflect only those incidents or cases that have been reported in newspapers and other sources of media. The actual number of cases, the NGO says, is likely to be almost two to three times higher.

At least 233 children were murdered in different crimes, including the flurry of violence caused by political and religious disturbances. Sixty-eight children were tortured by non-state actors, four were burnt to death and 12 were victims of acid attacks.

In addition to 97 cases of polio diagnosed last year, 47 children lost their lives while being treated in public health settings. Most of the deaths were caused by alleged negligence of doctors or because of a shortage of medicines.

The unmanageable traffic in the province claimed the lives of 148 children and injured 57. Added to the man-made disasters, the flood and its aftermath brought diseases such as diarrhoea, gastroenteritis, malaria and other water-borne illnesses, which claimed the lives of 127 children living in relief camps across the province. Meanwhile, according to UN estimates, 3.5 million children were at risk of water-borne diseases.

Another crime on the rise in 2010 was kidnapping — 212 children were kidnapped and most of them were subjected to brutal forms of violence during their abduction. Children from minority communities were the most vulnerable in these kidnapping for ransom cases.

For more details: http://tribune.com.pk/story/101513/violence-against-children-rises-by-9-2-sparc-data/

 

 

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