Explosive weapons caused record child deaths last year: Save the Children
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Explosive weapons caused record child deaths last year: Save the Children
"Nearly 12,000 children were killed or injured in conflicts worldwide last year, of which 70 percent were a result of explosives, the United Kingdom-based charity Save the Children has said, with those in Gaza suffering the most from Israeli attacks. This was the highest number since records began in 2006 and was up by 42 percent on the 2020 total, the group said in a new report published on Thursday."
"The world is witnessing the deliberate destruction of childhood and the evidence is undeniable, said Narmina Strishenets, senior conflict and humanitarian advocacy adviser at Save the Children UK. Children are paying the highest price in today's wars Missiles are falling where children sleep, play and learn turning the very places that should be the safest, like their homes and schools, into death traps."
"Previously, children in war zones were more likely to die from malnutrition, disease or failing health systems. But as conflicts take place more frequently in urban areas, children are being caught up as bombs and drones strike hospitals, schools and residential areas, Save the Children said. Actions once condemned by the international community and met with global outrage are now brushed aside as the cost of war.' That moral surrender is one of the most dangerous shifts of our time."
Nearly 12,000 children were killed or injured in conflicts worldwide in 2024, with 70 percent of casualties caused by explosives. The total was the highest since records began in 2006 and represented a 42 percent increase from 2020. Explosive weapons caused record child casualties as wars increasingly move into urban areas. Homes, schools and hospitals are being struck by missiles, bombs and drones, turning supposed safe spaces into death traps. Children in Gaza suffered the most from Israeli attacks. Conflicts with the most child casualties included Gaza and the occupied West Bank, Sudan, Myanmar, Ukraine and Syria.
Read at www.aljazeera.com
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