This is a summary of what was said by Toby Fricker,
UNICEF spokesperson in Geneva – to whom quoted text may be attributed – at today's
press briefing at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.
GENEVA, 21 June 2019 – Some 1.3 million people, including
around 650,000 children, are now in need of some form of humanitarian
assistance in the North-West and South-West regions of Cameroon, as the
security situation and living conditions continue to deteriorate. Around
450,000 of these people, half of whom are children, are internally displaced.
Children and their families are suffering amidst and fleeing
armed violence, attacks on their homes and schools, abduction, sexual violence
and recruitment into armed groups. Imposed lockdowns, or ghost-town days, set
in place by non-state armed groups, are affecting people’s freedom of movement
and the delivery of humanitarian assistance.
Thousands of people lack access or have reduced access to
basic services such as healthcare and safe drinking water, and livelihoods have
been destroyed. As of December 2018, an estimated 40 per cent of health
facilities in the South-West region were not functioning.
The crisis escalated out of protests in the Anglophone
region calling for greater autonomy nearly three years ago and has also had a
devastating impact on children’s right to an education.
For many children, it has been three years since they last
stepped foot in a classroom. Due to a ban on education by non-state armed
groups and attacks, over 80 per cent of schools have been closed, affecting
more than 600,000 children. At least 74 schools have been destroyed, while
students, teachers and school personnel have been exposed to violence,
abduction and intimidation. Since 2018, more than 300 students and teachers
have been kidnapped. After traumatic experiences, they were all subsequently
released.
The targeting of education is putting the future of an
entire generation of children at risk, children who with the right support and
opportunities can build a more stable and prosperous future.
Schools and classrooms must provide safe spaces for children
to learn, to be with their friends and to restore a sense of normalcy in their
lives. When children are out of school they face a higher risk of recruitment
by armed groups and are more likely to be exposed to child marriage, early
pregnancy, and the accompanying trauma and long lasting emotional distress that
these experiences bring.
While humanitarian access continues to be a challenge,
UNICEF and partners are doing what we can to reach and improve the lives of
children and people in need.
Over the past year, UNICEF has provided support to almost
140,000 children. Working with partners, UNICEF has distributed water,
sanitation and hygiene (WASH) kits to more than 78,000 people. Some 30,000
children have received psychosocial support through 33 child-friendly safe
spaces and youth clubs, and 972 separated and unaccompanied children have been
identified and are receiving support, with the aim of reuniting them with their
families.
Some 15,000 displaced children are now attending formal
schools in host communities outside the region and teachers have been trained
on providing psychosocial support for children who are dealing with the effects
of conflict and displacement. UNICEF is also working with religious and
community leaders to support advocacy efforts to re-open schools and to develop
risk mitigation plans for schools in the conflict-affected area, should attacks
occur during class-time.
UNICEF and partners are working out of Field Offices in Buea
in the South-West region and Bamenda in the North-West, positioning experts in
child protection, education, health and WASH as close to affected populations
as possible.
UNICEF calls on all parties to the conflict to: Protect all
children and their families and to allow humanitarian access to all people in
need, according to international humanitarian law.
Protect and re-open schools and ensure safe learning spaces for children without condition.
Protect and re-open schools and ensure safe learning spaces for children without condition.
UNICEF needs US$20 million to effectively respond to the
emergency in the North-West and South-West regions this year. We call on donors
and the wider international community to:
- Provide flexible and multi-year resources to scale up the immediate response and to ensure that every child receives the support needed to recover and to thrive again.
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