Where "public opinion and political expediency" have led to harsher treatment of refugees and asylum seekers, people still have an obligation to make special efforts to assist child refugees, a Vatican official said.
Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, the Vatican's representative to U.N agencies in Geneva, focused on the mistreatment of asylum seekers, and especially the unaccompanied minors among them, in an address Oct. 4 to members of the executive committee of the Office of the U.N High Commissioner for Refugees in Geneva.
In 2008, he said, 11,292 applications for asylum were lodged by unaccompanied minors in 22 member states of the European Union. With the violence across North Africa and the Arab world this year, "hundreds of unauthorized lone boys from the Middle East and other places are making their way across Europe."
The archbishop said there are instances in which minors arrive "under false pretences as forerunners to trigger family reunions or as victims of smuggling and trafficking," which means special attention must be paid to the possibility they are being exploited by adults.
"In this context, processing children's applications for asylum should be given a greater priority," he said.
"Unaccompanied minors must be treated first and foremost as children and their best interest must be a primary consideration independently of the reason for their flight," he said.
"The increased visibility acquired by unaccompanied minors claiming asylum in developed countries calls for a renewed attention to their need of protection and to the development of practical measures to help them adjust to the new environment," the archbishop said.
Archbishop Tomasi said unaccompanied child refugees should not be placed with adults in detention facilities, and he cited research that showed minors who seek spiritual guidance find an important source of motivation and support in religion.
The U.N High Commissioner for Refugees defines unaccompanied minors as those under 18 years of age or under a country's legal age of majority, who are "separated from both parents, and are not with and being cared for by a guardian or other adult who by law or custom is responsible for them."
Archbishop Tomasi said, "Creative compassion becomes possible if there is a genuine sense of solidarity and responsibility toward the needier members of our human family. Refugees are not anonymous numbers but people, men, women and children with individual stories, with talents to offer and aspirations to be met."
(Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops)

Vatican official calls for increased focus on child refugees

Where "public opinion and political expediency" have led to harsher treatment of refugees and asylum seekers, people still have ...

La actual consejería con competencias en materia de menores tiene previsto la edificación de un centro para los menores extranjeros no acompañados (MENA), proyecto que debido a la inversión que supone se prevé a largo plazo. Por ello, y ante las recomendaciones de la fiscalía y el mandato del Defensor del Pueblo que considera de forma explícita intolerable la existencia del centro La Esperanza, donde residen estos menores actualmente, debido a su mal estado, desde la consejería competente se baraja la posibilidad de que sean trasladados al albergue de Hadú. Este edificio se construyó inicialmente para su uso como albergue de realojamiento alternativo de personas o familias en situación de indigencia. 

Se les debería caer la cara de vergüenza

La actual consejería con competencias en materia de menores tiene previsto la edificación de un centro para los menores extranjeros no aco...
A estas alturas que se tenga que seguir insistiendo a los políticos que se tiene que mejorar en la protección en la infancia es inaudito pero es real. En España, los políticos se quedan horrorizados por los datos de los abusos sexuales pero aún estamos retrasados y no hacen nada. No entiendo esta inmovilidad cuando desde 1994 decidieron realizar un estudio por Félix Sánchez López, profesor de psicología de la Universidad de Salamanca sobre abuso sexual en la infancia:
“Un 23% de niñas y un 15% de niños sufre abusos sexuales en España antes de los 17 años. En el 46% de los casos, se repiten más de una vez sobre la misma víctima.”
 
Los datos son escalofriantes y cuando era pequeña pensaba que nadie me iba a entender porque solamente me había pasado a mi. Actualmente, somos pocas voces aunque hablamos por los que aún no han roto el silencio.
Save the Children España ha realizado una “Agenda de Infancia 2012-2015″ para la próxima legislatura porque se necesita hacer un gran cambio social para que l@s niñ@s reciban la protección necesaria y, sobretodo, en relación a los abusos sexuales infantiles. Por lo que me centro en un extracto del documento es este tema.
Extracto de Agenda de Infancia 2012-2015 Save the Children (Pág.39 a pág.55) 
PROTEGER A LOS NIÑOS CONTRA LA VIOLENCIA, EL ABUSO Y LA EXPLOTACIÓN

El Comité de los derechos del niño define como violencia “toda forma de perjuicio o abuso físico o mental, descuido o trato negligente, malos tratos o explotación, incluido el abuso sexual”(1). Se suele entender por violencia únicamente el daño físico intencional. Sin embargo, no deben minimizarse los efectos de las formas no físicas o no intencionales de daño a los niños y niñas, como el descuido y los malos tratos psicológicos, entre otras.
La exposición a la violencia afecta al bienestar y a la salud de los niños y niñas, a su desarrollo y puede provocar, aunque no necesariamente, un comportamiento antisocial, agresivo o destructivo, hacia uno mismo o hacia los demás (2). La protección de la infancia contra toda forma de violencia es, además de una obligación para garantizar sus derechos fundamentales, la mejor manera de reducir y prevenir todas las formas de violencia en la sociedad (3). La prevención de la violencia en una generación reduce su probabilidad en la siguiente.

Agenda de Infancia 2012-2015. Propuestas para la X Legislatura Save the Children

A estas alturas que se tenga que seguir insistiendo a los políticos que se tiene que mejorar en la protección en la infancia es inaudito ...

Last week Matilda Bogner, the Pacific area representative of the UN Human Rights Commission, severely criticised Australia’s mandatory detention policy. She declared: “Thousands of men, women and – most disturbingly of all – children have been held in Australian detention centres for long periods, even though they have committed no crime”.
The government has a policy of releasing children into community housing, but about 401 children are still being held in detention. Of those held in the Northern Territory, 119 are being held in the Darwin airport Lodge, including 58 unaccompanied minors.
Ms Bogner commented: “I urge the leaders of all Australian political parties to take a principled and courageous stand to break this ingrained habit of demonising asylum seekers.
Mental cruelty and child abuse
Ms Bogner’s comments were made in response to a statement on behalf of the Australian Medical Association by Dr Peter Morris, to the effect that detention of children in detention centres was equivalent to child abuse.
Addressing a federal commission of inquiry, Dr Morris pointed to an alarming incidence of mental health problems among children held in detention centres, which has led to a rising rate of attempts to commit suicide. In one most unusual case an unaccompanied nine-year old boy recently attempted suicide while being held in detention in the Northern Territory.
For a number of reasons statistics are not available for suicides of children under the age of 15. According to the Bureau of Statistics for 2009 (the most recent date for which figures are available) young people between 15 and 19 who committed suicide represented a large percentage of all those who died from all causes in this age category, but they were nevertheless the smallest age group of all people who committed suicide.
The rising rate of suicide attempts by young detainees is therefore a matter of deep concern. Dr Morris claims that a third of the children held in detention are suffering from depression. The federal immigration health service provider, International Health and Medical Services, has requested that more psychiatric services should be provided for detainees in the Northern Territory. This might be a good short-term move, but it ignores the fact that the major underlying cause of the deteriorating mental health of detainees is the policy of mandatory detention.
Splits in the ranks
The Gillard government’s latest advertising campaign is intended to pressure the federal opposition into supporting the government’s proposed offshore processing policy, under which asylum seekers who arrive in Australian waters by boat would be forcibly transported to indefinite detention in Malaysia.
The government is blocking its ears to all objections over its immigration policies of mandatory detention and off-shore processing of applications for asylum. The federal opposition is continuing to attack the government, with good cause, over the abuse of human rights involved in the Malaysian proposal. Nevertheless, the opposition still intends to tow back asylum seeker vessels to sea, even though they are unwanted in the nations from which they sailed, and might drown in the attempt to find a port that will accept them.
A number of federal MPs from the two largest parties have been exhibiting signs of discomfort with their party’s immigration policies. One of them is Senator Eric Abetz, who has spoken out in support of asylum seekers from Iran, the majority of whom are Christians who fled religious persecution. After receiving reports of a death sentence passed by an Iranian court on Christian pastor Youcef Nadarkhani, Betz talked of “the extreme nature of the religious intolerance in Iran” and commented: “One can understand why people are fleeing Iran”.
In marked contrast, the Immigration Minister, Chris Bowen, has stated openly that he had tried repeatedly to reach an agreement with the Iranian government to accept the return of Iranian asylum seekers detained in Iraq, even though they would “simply be killed” by the Iranian regime, as the chairman of the Iranian Community Association remarked bluntly.
Meanwhile, the Commonwealth Ombudsman, Allan Asher, is conducting an investigation into the rising rate of self-harm among detainees. There were 1,132 attempts or threats of self-harm in the past year, including 20 incidents on Christmas Island in one week last June, which occurred while Asher was inspecting detention facilities on the island.
The situation there is so bad that detention centre staff have been requested to carry knives at all times, to cut down detainees who have attempted to hang themselves. Detainees are not allowed to have razors. If they want to shave they must request a razor, and hand it back to staff afterwards.
The government has introduced into parliament an amended bill to enable the Malaysian proposal to go ahead, but a vote on the bill is not expected to take place for several weeks. Prime Minister Julia Gillard has promised to examine the Asher report seriously, in order to determine the proper course of action.
Meanwhile, she should bear in mind the advice of Louise Newman, an independent adviser to the government on mental health in detention centres. Regarding the current evidence of deteriorating mental health among detainees, she stated during a recent ABC TV interview:
“The government is not wanting to consider, at the present time, the fact that mandatory detention itself, prolonged detention of vulnerable people, is producing this damage. I think that’s a very unpalatable and difficult political message, but it’s certainly one … that is absolutely vital for us to consider.” (cpa.org.au)

Asylum seekers’ hopes still hang in the balance

Last week Matilda Bogner, the Pacific area representative of the UN Human Rights Commission, severely criticised Australia’s mandatory de...
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