GA/SHC/3647

THIRD COMMITTEE HEARS CALL FOR RATIFICATION OF OPTIONAL PROTOCOL ON CHILDREN IN ARMED CONFLICT

29/10/2001
Press Release
GA/SHC/3647


Fifty-sixth General Assembly

Third Committee

23rd Meeting (AM)


THIRD COMMITTEE HEARS CALL FOR RATIFICATION OF OPTIONAL PROTOCOL


ON CHILDREN IN ARMED CONFLICT


Importance of Protocol's Entry into Force by 2002 Stressed


The Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict told the Third Committee (Social, Humanitarian and Cultural) this morning that children faced many appalling obstacles worldwide, and none more pressing than armed conflict.  He challenged Member States that had not yet ratified the Optional Protocol on armed conflict to the Convention on the Rights of the Child to do so immediately.


Opening the Committee’s final meeting on items related to child protection, Mr. Olara Otunnu summed up the five-day debate, stressing the importance of the Optional Protocol being fully in force by the time the General Assembly special session on children was convened next year.  The instrument, which requires 10 countries to ratify it to bring it into force, would provide additional impetus to the international community's efforts to address and eradicate the situation of children in armed conflict, he said.


In an interactive discussion with Mr. Otunnu, Committee members raised a variety of concerns related to the situation of children in armed conflict.  Several voiced concerns about the root causes of children's recruitment into armed conflicts, specifically the effect indoctrination and alienation have on youngsters.


Reviewing highlights of the debate, Andrew Roberfroid, the Deputy Executive Director of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), said it was pleasing to hear that many States had been planning to ratify the Optional Protocols.  He also noted that several countries had said there needed to be an international instrument to protect children from violence, which was something being discussed at UNICEF.  UNICEF was also working against the impunity many violators of children's rights enjoyed, and it was hoped that this would be part of the discussions at the General Assembly Special Session on Children next year.


During the five-day discussion, speakers covered many of the complex topics that were involved in the promotion and protection of children's rights.  Those included the importance of education, the effect that HIV/AIDS has on children, the urgent need to eradicate child labour, and the dire circumstances that


children who were trafficked for economic or sexual exploitation found themselves in.  Other delegates spoke about the level of accountability that should be assessed to children who participated in armed conflict.


Representatives of Eritrea, Kuwait, India, Andorra, Slovakia, Bolivia, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Indonesia, Liechtenstein, Myanmar, Jamaica, Israel and Uganda spoke during today's deliberation.


Participating in the interactive dialogue with Mr. Otunnu were representatives of Liechtenstein, Libya, India, Belgium (on behalf of the European Union), Syria, Sudan, Benin and the observer for Palestine.


When the Committee reconvenes at 3 p.m., it will hear from the final speakers on the promotion and protection of children's rights.  Following that, the Committee will begin consideration of the programme of activities of the international decade for the world's indigenous people.


Background


The Third Committee (Social, Humanitarian and Cultural) met this morning to conclude its consideration of items related to the protection and promotion of the rights of children.  For details, see Press Release GA/SHC/3642 of 22 October.


OLARA OTUNNU, Under-Secretary-General and Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict, said a research agenda on the impact of war on children was put together during the current year, and it provided important statistics, data, and best practices.  The proposals that stemmed from the research agenda and the report that was prepared based on information from the research agenda were available in the room.


He said the working groups were important resources in ensuring the protection of all children.  There had often been effective collaborations with the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO).  It was important to find a way to strengthen the role of child protection advisors, and many discussions had been held with representatives of the Department of Peacekeeping Operations.  Years ago, there had been a discussion about children in Rwanda, and this year, children in Sierra Leone and Cambodia would be discussed.  Children were often witnesses to atrocities, and others might have been under the age of 18 when they committed certain crimes.  The Optional Protocol on children in armed conflict was a very important issue for the Office of the Special Representative.  It was hoped that it would enter into force soon, certainly before next year's special session.  It was important for any countries that had not ratified it to do so before the end of the year.


Mr. Otunnu said it was important to ensure that the good work that had been done be translated into effective practices on the ground.  There needed to be monitoring and reporting mechanisms in place so that the actions of the parties in conflict situations could be seen.  There were three factors that had to be examined -- the indoctrination of young people into armed conflict; the alienation of youth, and how that could be exploited for negative purposes; and the recruitment of young people in conflict.  The international community had to find ways to go beyond looking at the reasons for young people in conflicts.  It was important to find how they were indoctrinated into armed conflict.  The international community could do a lot more to get closer to the local communities -- the parents, the teachers, the priests, the community leaders -- to answer questions about why and how children got involved in armed conflicts.


Dialogue with Committee


Following Mr. Otunnu’s opening statement, the floor was then opened for questions and comments from Committee members.


The representative of Liechtenstein echoed the Special Representative’s sentiments concerning the gap between norms and standards and implementation.  The situation on the ground was often far different from what was conceived on paper.  He wondered if Mr. Otunnu felt that international instruments and discussions by United Nations bodies could be successfully or comprehensively translated into Security Council resolutions.  He also wondered about the special situation of children in the truth-seeking process.


Concerning the reports before the Committee, the representative of Libya said her delegation would have liked the report on the Special Representative’s work to consider the armed struggle in the Palestinian Occupied Territories, as well as the situation of children in Iraq.  She thought the report seemed to focus on children in some countries and not others.  She also suggested that more emphasis should be placed on the unique situation of girls in armed conflict.  Other areas that she felt should be given importance included all kinds of violence against children -- physical, sexual and psychological.  She also wondered if his Office had taken into account the issues of indoctrination and alienation when it considered root causes of children in armed conflict.


Responding to those comments, Mr. Otunnu said that when children came before truth-seeking processes as witnesses or participants, they were provided every consideration and protection.  However, when they came in response to accusations of committing atrocities, problems often occurred.  The issue of accountability and victim-hood needed to be balanced.


He said that following the practice that had been followed in Sierra Leone, truth-seeking processes for most persons below the age of 18 generally ended with rehabilitation or reinsertion efforts.  But for particularly egregious crimes, there might be the need to involve judicial bodies, not to pronounce punishment, but to suggest various rehabilitative measures.  It was important to balance the “child is always a child” mentality with the notion that responsibility grew with age, he added.


The gap between international instruments and standards on the ground was a particular challenge, he said.  The relationship between his Office and the Security Council had been very fruitful.  There appeared to be more awareness throughout the Organization that when mandates were set or initiatives were undertaken, the situation of children in conflict should be given special consideration.  However, that was not only the responsibility of the Council, it was the responsibility of the entire international community, relevant United Nations agencies and Governments within the countries in question.


He said it was unfortunate that the representative of Libya felt that the report gave the impression that more attention had been paid to the situation of some children over others.  He hoped, however, that the case studies would help all nations with high numbers of child participants in conflicts.  His Office was concerned with all children in armed conflict.  He also said that it was important to address the ideologies that facilitated the mobilization of young people as well as those that alienated them.


He went on to say that he had watched with tremendous pain the victimization and killing of children in the Palestinian Occupied territories.  Those killings were unacceptable and must not continue.  While his current report had not specifically mentioned children living under sanctions regimes, past reports had noted that the Security Council must do more to ensure that children did not end up paying the highest price, particularly in terms of education, nutrition and health.  He added that while he understood why sanctions must be imposed, he felt that a formula had not yet been developed that could properly target such regimes.


The representative of India recalled the comments made by Libya, and wondered what the relationship was between indoctrination and alienation.  The representative of Belgium, speaking on behalf of the European Union asked about demobilization, rehabilitation and reintegration efforts.


Responding to the second round of questions, Mr. Otunnu said the relationship between indoctrination and alienation varied from one situation to another.  One could imagine a situation where indoctrination could be used to create alienation among youth -- an “us against them” scenario -- that could be used as a base to draw them into conflict situations.


He said it was important that the child soldier dimension of demobilization efforts should always be kept in view, particularly in areas where the number of child soldiers was high.  Reversing or enhancing the fate of child soldiers was a wonderful opportunity for the international community to put its resources where its words were.  The resources to implement action on the ground remained meager, he said.


Local communities and parents must also be mobilized to work with international actors to ensure that children were reinserted into society.  Importantly, he added, everyone must work to ensure viable alternatives for children caught in armed conflict.  The bluff of the armed groups must be called, but if parents could not provide meals, or there was no access to education, in most cases, children would be recycled back to conflicts.


He said his Office and the international community had been particularly concerned with the situation of girls in armed conflict, particularly the spread of HIV/AIDS among that vulnerable population.  Sadly, there was social reticence to speak about that issue, which made girls double victims.  Clearly the role of programmes designed to benefit girls was very important.  Another important issue was to provide schooling -- not education, necessarily -- but some learning programmes.


The representative of Syria said that reports before the Committee had once again failed to mention the situation of children living under foreign occupation.  Ignoring the struggle of those children would not make the problem go away, she added.


The representative of Sudan asked if Mr. Otunnu’s Office worked actively with national NGOs.  Her delegation would like more information on efforts to set up a body to monitor the activities of combat participants.  She hoped that other reports would focus on the impact of other diseases that affected children, particularly malaria.


To the representative of Syria, Mr. Otunnu said he could only repeat his earlier comment that his Office’s efforts to protect children in conflict were universal -- his office dealt with children in armed conflict, regardless of the situation.


Regarding the role of national and local NGOs, he said that at every stop in the course of his itinerary throughout the year he would ask to meet with representatives of local civil society groups.  He would also ask those representatives what was their level of cooperation with other processes concerning the protection of children’s rights.


On creating more effective mechanisms for monitoring and reporting on the conduct of participants in conflict, he said comments from the Committee would be welcomed.  In the meantime, he hoped that all agreed that such a mechanism was critical to making a difference in the lives of children on the ground.  Such a mechanism would be a key way to bring pressure on conflict participants and let them know that the international community was aware of their activities.


He said the current report aimed to rectify what he felt had been an imbalance in international coverage of the impact of HIV/AIDS on girls.  At the same time, he hoped that focus had not been at the expense of highlighting the challenges posed by other diseases.  The international community must not create situations that would make children vulnerable to diseases that were generally preventable.


The representative of Benin said that when war broke out, it was already too late for children.  To that end, did Mr. Otunnu ever take part in any conflict prevention initiatives?


The observer of Palestine reiterated the comments of others that reports before the Committee had ignored the situation of children living under foreign occupation.  That had practically become a pattern throughout the organization, she said.  That was distressing because the protection of children living under foreign occupation had been the focus of several Assembly resolutions.


Statements


AHMED TAHIR BADURI (Eritrea) said his Government had taken several concrete measures to improve chances for the survival and development of Eritrea’s children.  To facilitate the implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which Eritrea had signed and ratified by 1994, a booklet had been translated into all the country’s languages.  That project had been followed by a broad awareness-raising campaign.  Also, also health, education and social welfare policies had also been elaborated, and the Ministry of Labour and Human Welfare had been entrusted with the primary responsibility of promoting, enforcing and implementing children’s rights and reporting to the Committee on the Rights of the Child.


He went on to say that programmes and projects aimed at enhancing coordination between Government bodies, United Nations agencies and civil society actors had also been set up and had been crucial to identifying the goals for survival development and participation of children.  At the same time, it was important to realize that moving from declared commitments on paper to concrete implementation remained a challenge.  There were still too many children suffering needlessly from a variety of scourges, including armed conflict and sexual exploitation.


He said that children in Eritrea were victims of deportation, indiscriminate bombings and invasions that had left communities devastated.  Recent border conflicts with Ethiopia had only complicated matters by negatively impacting Eritrea’s economic progress and compounding the problems of poverty and low human capacity.  Such developments for Eritrea and other countries around the world highlighted the need to keep the special situation of vulnerable groups high on the international agenda.  Action impacting the special needs of children traumatized by war, including clearing landmines unexploded ordnance, needed sustained consideration, particularly after guns had fallen silent.


NAWAF ALENEZI (Kuwait) said children were the future of nations, and all countries worked to ensure a better future for children.  That involved attention being given to families in the society.  Children's rights were an indivisible part of human rights.  The interest of Kuwait in children and childhood was based on the principles of the Constitution, which stated that the family was the basis of society.  The Government had ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the Arab world devoted a day to children on each 1 October.  Kuwait was ahead of other Arab States in the promotion and protection of children's rights, according to a report by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).  Education was free and compulsory; and a scientific center had been established, as had a center for the culture of the child.


He said in a number of areas of the world, children were victims of armed conflict, sexual exploitation and HIV/AIDS.  Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) should be lauded for their work in protecting children involved in armed conflicts.  The children of Kuwait had in the past been victims of crimes against children.  And the State of Iraq still had over 600 prisoners from Kuwait.  There was also the situation of children in the Occupied Territories, where Israelis were infringing on human rights, including the human rights of children.  The international community had to invoke the Convention on the Rights of the Child to guarantee a better future for all of humanity.


A.K. BHATTACHARJEE (India) said five million children still died before they were five, and 77 per cent of those deaths were due to preventable causes.  More than 20 per cent of children of primary school age in developing countries did not attend.  Ten million or more lost either one or both parents due to HIV/AIDS.  And about 177 million children were stunted by malnutrition.  Those chilling numbers came from UNICEF, well over a decade after the report, "First Call for Children".  There was no one reason for this continuing tragedy, but if there was one factor that was responsible more than any other, it was the dwindling resources at the disposal of developing countries to tackle a problem of such enormous proportions.  The process of globalization limited or weakened the ability of governments in developing countries to take independent or affirmative action, particularly in the social field.


Mr. Bhattacharjee said an early start in life that sustained the full growth and development of the child, and enabled the adult to fully attain his or her potential, was vital.  Children, therefore, were the first concern and priority.  Literacy, particularly from an early childhood, was the key.  Despite a scarcity of resources, a law was recently enacted in India which would make primary education compulsory and free.  India had also begun work towards establishing a National Commission on Children, which would help attain the goal of the full and complete development of children.  India remained strongly committed to the full eradication of all forms of child labour, wherever it could exist.  The National Human Rights Commission, and the legal system had been active on that issue.


He said the path-breaking work of Mr. Otunnu should be lauded.  His recommendations on reaching out to children, reintegrating children affected by armed conflict, and taking into account local values and traditions in activities related to alleviating the plight of children in or after armed conflict, were important.  However, those who sought to promote their own agendas either through armed conflict or terrorism knew no rules.  They used children without scruples.  Commitments that could hardly be monitored, let alone enforced, perhaps lulled the international community into a false sense of security.  There were no easy answers.


ROSER SUNE PASCUET (Andorra) said the special session on HIV/AIDS had provided a unique opportunity to study one of the issues that severely affected the world’s children.  All should work to find comprehensive and effective solutions to that scourge.  It would also be important in the coming weeks and months to continue to pay special attention to the impact of war and conflict situations on children.  She encouraged all countries to sign and ratify the two optional protocols to the Convention on the Rights of the Child.


Without education, she continued, it would be impossible to eradicate many of the challenges facing today’s children, particularly sexual exploitation.  She said her Government would present its report to the Committee on the Rights of the Child during its next substantive session.  She hoped that the agreements reached at the rescheduled special session on children would provide a concrete foundation for coordinated international action in all areas related to the protection and promotion of the rights of children.


JURAJ PRIPUTEN (Slovakia) said Slovakia attached great importance to the protection and promotion of the rights of the child.  To that end, it had taken necessary legislative, administrative and other measures for the further enhancement of children's rights, including the ratification of major relevant international instruments.  After the dissolution of the Czech and the Slovak Federal Republic, Slovakia had succeeded to the Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1993. 


His Government had decided to sign the Optional Protocols to the Convention in August 2001, he said.  His delegation called upon States to support and accept an amendment to the Convention to increase the number of experts on the Committee on the Rights of the Child to 18 from 10.  Such an increase was necessary to provide the Committee with sufficient capacity to handle the overload of work resulting from the almost universal ratification of the Convention.


Mr. Priputen said the status of the child was set forth in the Constitution of the Slovak Republic, which contained a provision for the special protection of children and youth.  According to the Constitution, effective legislation ensured protection of all children.  Regular work on improving the legislation was being done in order to ensure the best interest of the child.


He said an important step aimed at the reinforcement of the commitments enshrined in the Convention had been the establishment of the Slovak Committee on the Rights of the Child in 2000, which served as an advisory body to the Ministry of Labour, Social Affairs and Family.  That Committee dealt with specific problems in the area of compliance with children rights and proposed measures to solve those problems.  The Committee consisted of representatives of various ministries, as well as officials of local authorities and representatives of NGOs.


VIVIANA LIMPIAS (Bolivia) highlighted her country’s efforts aimed at elaborating and implementing consistent policies that benefited children.  Bolivia had had great success in building a country that provided basic services and legal protection for boys, girls and adolescents.  Through significant efforts over the past ten years, legislative reforms had been implemented, with the Convention as the guide.


Bolivia, she said, was a very young country.  Therefore there were no excuses that could justify the violation of children’s rights.  Far-reaching change were underway, particularly to eradicate poverty and malnutrition.  There were also programmes under way to increase school attendance among girls.  Bolivia also firmly believed in the participation of NGOs and relevant United Nations bodies for the benefit of children.  She expressed support for the ongoing negotiations concerning the Assembly special session on children.  She hoped that the success of that event would not hinge on one more list of promises but would be a true expression of renewed political commitment to the cause of the world’s children for the next decade.


MUN JONG CHOL (Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK)) said there had been significant progress since the 1990 World Summit on Children.  However, there was still a long way to go for implementation of national obligations and international commitments regarding children.  Exploitation of children, trafficking, child pornography, HIV/AIDS and the recruitment of children into armed conflict continued to be major problems which required urgent solutions.  Problems facing children worldwide today were most likely attributable to poverty, social inequity, inefficient socio-economic conditions and the irresponsibility of governments.  Children were the undertakers of the future.  As the physical and psychological characteristics of children required special care and protection by adults, it was clear that the future of humankind depended on how children's rights were protected and guaranteed.


He said the Government of the DPRK, having consistently adhered to a policy of priority for children, had achieved a number of things in the field of the promotion and protection of children rights.  The first matter the Government considered at its first meeting after the liberation of Korea was the production of pencils for children.  Since then, the Government had, for more than half a century, exerted every effort for the sake of children.  In the DPRK, national legislative measures had been taken to fully protect and promote the rights of the child, including the enactment of the Law on Upbringing and Education of Children; the Law on Family; the Law on Public Health Care; and the Law on Education.  In addition, free medical care and 11-years free compulsory education had been introduced.  Further, nurseries, kindergartens and maternity hospitals had been established throughout the country.


There were, he said, recent attempts by Japan to educate its own children with distorted history.  The textbooks to be used at secondary schools, which had been approved by the Japanese authorities last April, contained flagrant distortions that depicted Japan's colonization of Korea as a just cause for defence.  Japan had falsified the history of aggression and exploitation and had even glorified its aggression towards Asian countries as a just war to liberate Asia from the domination of whites.  In addition, Japan had deleted reference to the large-scale crimes committed against humanity, including the plundering of immeasurable natural resources from Korea; the kidnapping and forced drafting of six million Koreans into the army or labour slavery, and the enslavement of over 200,000 Korean women as sex slaves, who were known as comfort women. 


WIWIEK SETYAWATI (Indonesia) said it was a tragic reflection of today’s world that the issues of children in armed conflict had to be discussed.  Indonesia lauded the accomplishments that had been made over recent years in science and technology and marveled at the innovations in information and communication technology.  Yet it was during these very years of advancement and accomplishment that children in regions throughout the world had become targets and victims of the violence and armed conflict, and perhaps more tragically, that they had at times been forced to play the role of perpetrators of violence.


Ms. Setyawati said since children represented approximately one half of the country's population, her Government was working vigourously to protect them from abuse, exploitation and violence.  To that end, her Government was working together with the Parliament to adopt comprehensive legislation on child protection.  That would facilitate implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, as well as the International Labour Organization's Convention 182 on the worst forms of child labour.  Last month, Indonesia had signed the Optional Protocols to the Convention, and most of their provisions were already integrated into its five-year National Development Programme 2000-2004.


She said Indonesia was deeply concerned by the issues that touched on the physical safety and well being of the child.  In the country, the constant and increasing threat to national stability and coping with the precarious situation of the financial crisis had, sadly, opened the door for violations of the rights of children.  It was understood that as work was being done to restore economic confidence, the Government could not overlook the very real needs of children.  Indonesia was addressing the situation by strengthening ties and cooperation with civil society and non-governmental organizations in providing for the safety and protection of children.  It continued within its limited resources to make progress toward the goals of the World Summit for Children by improving the quality of education, health care, nutrition and social services and access to them.


CHRISTIAN WENAWESER (Liechtenstein) said that although the events of

11 September had caused the postponement of the Assembly special session on children, the importance his delegation attached to elaborating a strong, action-oriented outcome document had not diminished.  Liechtenstein remained committed to high-level participation in that event and believed that children should not merely be the objects of multilateral and national efforts, but rather should be involved in all activities affecting their well-being.


While the international community awaited the rescheduling of the special session, a wide range of issues needed to be tackled. Chief among those was the situation of children in armed conflict.  Yet, the manifold and complex consequences of armed conflict were not the only ways in which children today were victimized by violence.  For that reason, Liechtenstein believed that strong language on the issue of all forms of violence against children should be included in the session’s outcome document.  Violence led to violence, he said, and victims often became perpetrators at later stages.  It was therefore appropriate for the international community to closely examine that issue in all its aspects.


He said that globalization had made everyone more aware of the notion that education was invaluable in keeping up with a rapidly changing society.  It was now clear that education limited to childhood years, while necessary, was not nearly enough.  Education should now be ongoing, from childhood, into adolescence and beyond, but, in that regard, the picture for the vast majority of children was bleak.  Without access to basic education, much less secondary or higher education, it would be nearly impossible to combat poverty and underdevelopment.  While it was important to stress the right to education for every child, it was perhaps more relevant for everyone to realize that investing in education was the best way to invest in the overall development of society.


DAW KHIN THANDAR (Myanmar) said that since the World Summit for Children, the rights of the child had been at the top of the global agenda.  That was also true in Myanmar's national agenda, as her Government had given top priority to children as a matter of policy.  Since Myanmar had acceded to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, her Government had steadfastly implemented a series of National Level Plans for the well-being of children.  The Child Law had been enacted in 1993, and a National Committee on the Rights of the Child had been formed later that year to implement the measures embodied in the Convention.  In 1996, the Government had submitted its first national report on the implementation of the Convention, and now, the second report was being prepared.


She said education had been highly regarded in Myanmar throughout its history.  In her country today, necessary steps were also being taken to ensure that children had the right to basic education and to reduce the drop-out rate.  Presently, primary school enrollment was 92 per cent, and the aim of the 1999-2003 Education Plan was to ensure that at least 80 per cent of all children finished primary school.  The National Education For All Project was being implemented, and there were several other ongoing projects being implemented with the help from UNICEF, UNDP, and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).


After gaining independence in 1948, Myanmar had been faced with various armed insurgencies, she said  Efforts of successive governments to develop infrastructure, such as roads, schools and bridges, had been subjected to attacks by one or the other armed insurgent groups.  After decades of such meaningless destruction, the present Government had reached unprecedented cease-fire agreements with many of the groups.  The leaders of the national races were now turning their energies to the constructive development of their respective regions, and the Government was providing as much assistance as it could by building roads and opening hospitals, clinics and schools, among other efforts.  Those efforts had paid off, as development had replaced destruction.  Once inaccessible regions had become accessible, and the sound of mortars and guns had been replaced by the ringing sound of school bells.  Poppy fields were being replaced by fields of buckwheat and sugar cane.  Myanmar's relentless efforts would not stop until every acre of poppy had been eradicated, and every gun in the hands of a child had been replaced with a pen.


PATRICIA DURRANT (Jamaica) said her country was committed to ensuring that the special session on children resulted in clear and meaningful commitments and a plan of action which placed the welfare of every child at the forefront of the international agenda.  Her Government would continue to work with the other members of the Bureau in guiding the work of the Preparatory Committee.  There was an obligation to use as a starting point the Convention on the Rights of the Child and its Optional Protocols, as well as other international instruments.  The international community should ensure that there were appropriate monitoring legal instruments, and that those who violated the rights of children were brought to justice.


Ms. Durrant said transnational-organized criminal groups had become more sophisticated, and used the technologies available today to more easily disseminate child pornography.  The Convention against Transnational Organized Crime could be an important weapon in battling that scourge.  Children were also affected by the trade in small arms.  Mr. Otunnu’s efforts to secure commitments from parties in armed conflicts to keep children out of the fighting were welcomed.


She said the work of UNICEF was particularly important in child protection.  UNICEF's role in child advocacy, and in providing humanitarian assistance, education and health care for children was well known.  Its role among internally displaced and refugee children, and in post-conflict peace-building and rehabilitation deserved special support.  The special session should not serve as a wake-up call, but a starting point in creating a new and better world for all children.


      Dialogue with the Committee


After concluding its general debate, members of the Committee made comments on the several statements that had been made during earlier rounds of questions.


The representative of Israel said that some delegations had used the opportunity of the dialogue to make negative comments about his country.  It was important for all to remember that Israeli children also suffered from the effects of terrorist activities.  Education, not indoctrination and reinforcing negative stereotypes, was the key to ensuring that all children could break out of the cycle of armed conflict.


He said that the while the tragic events of 11 September had recently sensitized many to the evils of terrorism, Israel had been aware of that scourge for more than fifty years.  That country’s sad experience with hostage-taking, indiscriminate killings, and attacks on schools and sports centers by Palestinians went back a long way.  He hoped that Mr. Otunnu would include in his next report the situation of children and terrorism, particularly the impact on their future.  History had shown that Israel would never give in to terrorism and peace would only come to the region when terrorist activity ended.


The representative of Uganda said that in his comments Mr. Otunnu had made reference to the name of a market in the Democratic Republic of the Congo -- the Kampala market -- where women and girls were sexually exploited.  She said it would be unfortunate if the name of that market was spelled the same as the spelling of the capital city of Uganda.  The use of the name had no linkage to Uganda or any of its cities.


OLARA OTUNNU, Under-Secretary-General and Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict, said he had taken very careful note of the statements by the observer of Palestine and the representative of Israel.  The Office of the Special Representative was paying close attention to the situation there. 


He said he did not know the origins of the name of a market in the Congo where women and girls were being exploited for sexual purposes by soldiers in the area.


ANDRE ROBERFROID, Deputy Executive Director of UNICEF, said it was pleasing to hear that many States had been making plans to ratify the Optional Protocols to the Convention on the Rights of the Child.  Many delegations had referred to matters that were directly linked to poverty -- street children and child labour.  On children living in the streets, UNICEF had been working to reintegrate them into society and get them back in schools.  On child labour, UNICEF supported and worked with the International Labour Organization on Convention 182, which aimed to eradicate the worst forms of child labour.  Education was of the utmost importance, and UNICEF was committed to enrolling those children in school.


Mr. Roberfroid said several countries had said there needed to be an international instrument to protect children from violence, which was something being discussed at UNICEF.  Progress had been made on the subject of children in armed conflict.  UNICEF was working against the impunity many violators of children's rights enjoyed, and it was hoped that this would be part of the discussions at the General Assembly special session on children next year.  Above all, the international community had to show the children of the world how important they were to everybody's future.


* *** *


For information media. Not an official record.