How protracted conflicts from Gaza to DRC are leaving deep scars on children’s lives

Analysis How protracted conflicts from Gaza to DRC are leaving deep scars on children’s lives
The UN report documented 4,856 grave violations against children in Gaza alone. (AFP)
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Updated 15 July 2025
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How protracted conflicts from Gaza to DRC are leaving deep scars on children’s lives

How protracted conflicts from Gaza to DRC are leaving deep scars on children’s lives
  • The UN verified 41,370 grave violations against children in 2024 — a 25 percent rise and the highest number ever recorded
  • Gaza alone saw 4,856 verified violations — more than any other region — with thousands of children killed or injured

LONDON: For children trapped in the world’s conflict zones, 2024 was a year of unprecedented suffering. The UN verified 41,370 grave violations against children — a record-shattering 25 percent increase over the previous year — devastating countless young lives.

From Gaza to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, children are among the most vulnerable victims of war. The consequences go far beyond immediate physical danger, shaping the course of their lives for years to come.

According to the UN Security Council’s June 17 report on children and armed conflict, at least 22,495 were maimed, killed, recruited, or denied life-saving aid — robbed of the safety and innocence that should define childhood.

“The cries of 22,495 innocent children who should be learning to read or play ball, but instead have been forced to learn how to survive gunfire and bombings, should keep all of us awake at night,” Virginia Gamba, special representative of the UN secretary-general for children and armed conflict, said in the report.

“This must serve as a wake-up call. We are at the point of no return.”




According to the UN, at least 22,495 children were maimed, killed, recruited, or denied life-saving aid — robbed of the safety and innocence that should define childhood. (AFP)

The report, the most damning since the UN began collecting data in 1996, also noted a surge in children suffering multiple violations. In 2024, some 3,137 children were subjected to overlapping abuses such as abduction, forced recruitment, and sexual violence — up from 2,684 the year before.

Months before the report’s release, the UN children’s fund, UNICEF, warned of a crisis beyond precedent. In December, the agency declared 2024 the worst year in its history for children caught in war.

“By almost every measure, 2024 has been one of the worst years on record for children in conflict in UNICEF’s history — both in terms of the number of children affected and the level of impact on their lives,” Catherine Russell, the agency’s executive director, said in a statement.

These children are more likely to be malnourished, displaced, or out of school than those in peaceful regions — a reality she insisted “must not be the new normal.”

“We cannot allow a generation of children to become collateral damage to the world’s unchecked wars,” Russell added.




Palestinian men carry the bodies of children killed earlier in the day in an Israeli strike in Gaza City on July 2, 2025. (AFP)

Beyond the physical toll of conflict, psychological wounds are also profound and enduring, often outlasting conflicts themselves.

“What the recent UN report shows is that children caught in conflict zones are facing unimaginable levels of harm,” Dr. Jeeda Alhakim, a specialist counseling psychologist at City St George’s, University of London, told Arab News.

“This kind of violence doesn’t end when the event is over. It stays with them.”

Alhakim explained that prolonged exposure to danger alters a child’s perception of safety and can even reshape their biology. “When the body is constantly in survival mode, it becomes harder to sleep, concentrate, or feel calm,” she said.

Over time, this toxic stress can disrupt brain development, especially in neural regions responsible for memory, decision making, and emotional regulation. “Trauma doesn’t just live in the mind,” Alhakim said. “It becomes embedded in the nervous system.”

INNUMBERS

  • 41,370 Violations against children.
  • 11,967 Children maimed or killed.

(Source: UN, 2024)

There are “disruptions in the brain’s stress regulation systems,” she added, “especially in areas like the amygdala, hippocampus, and prefrontal cortex, which are central to managing emotions, remembering things, and making sense of what’s happening around them.”

She emphasized that trauma is not always visible. “Some children appear fine on the outside but are struggling internally. Others show signs of distress more openly. It depends on their experiences, the support they have, and what they’ve lost.

“When children struggle with focus, learning, or emotional outbursts, it’s not simply behavioral — it’s a sign that their brains are adapting to survive.”

Regardless of how it manifests, the consequences are deeply human. “Many children carry a profound sense of loss — of a parent, a home, or a future they once believed in,” she added.




Beyond the physical toll of conflict, psychological wounds are also profound and enduring, often outlasting conflicts themselves. (AFP)

Among the hardest-hit regions, the Palestinian territories ranked highest in the UN’s report, with 8,554 verified violations. More than 4,856 occurred in the Gaza Strip alone.

The UN confirmed the deaths of 1,259 Palestinian children in Gaza, while it continues to verify reports of another 4,470 killed in 2024. The report also documented 22 cases of Palestinian boys used as human shields in Gaza and five more in the West Bank.

Since Israel’s military operation in Gaza began in retaliation for the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on southern Israel, children in the Palestinian enclave have faced bombardment, deprivation, and the collapse of essential services.

Conditions further deteriorated in March when Israeli forces resumed bombing raids and tightened their blockade, triggering catastrophic levels of displacement and the near-total breakdown of healthcare and education.

“Under our watch, Gaza has become the graveyard of children (and) starving people,” Philippe Lazzarini, commissioner-general of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, posted on X on July 11.

“Their choice is between two deaths: starvation or being shot at. The most cruel (and) machiavellian scheme to kill, in total impunity.”




Since Israel’s military operation in Gaza began in retaliation for the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on southern Israel, children in the Palestinian enclave have faced bombardment, deprivation, and the collapse of essential services. (AFP)

His remarks followed the killing of 15 people, including nine children and four women, who were waiting in line for nutritional supplements in Deir Al-Balah on July 10. The Israel Defense Forces have consistently denied targeting civilians.

The UN has nevertheless kept Israel on its blacklist of parties committing grave violations against children for a second consecutive year. Gaza’s ruling Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad also remain on the list.

Outside the Palestinian territories, other regions also witnessed surging violence. In 2024, the UN recorded more than 4,000 violations in the DRC, some 2,500 in Somalia, nearly 2,500 in Nigeria, and more than 2,200 in Haiti.

Among the most alarming trends was a sharp rise in sexual violence. The UN documented a 35 percent increase in such cases last year, with a notable spike in gang rapes, underscoring the systematic use of sexual violence as a weapon of war.

“Sexual violence is especially devastating,” Alhakim said. “It harms children physically, but also emotionally and socially. It can leave them feeling ashamed, isolated, and deeply confused, especially when used deliberately as a weapon of war.”




In 2024, the UN recorded more than 4,000 violations in the DRC, some 2,500 in Somalia, nearly 2,500 in Nigeria, and more than 2,200 in Haiti. (AFP)

While the UN verified more than 2,000 cases in 2024, the real number is likely far higher. The report stressed that sexual violence remains vastly underreported due to stigma, fear of retaliation, social norms, lack of access to services, and impunity.

“Children are often too afraid or unable to speak out,” said Alhakim. “In some communities, the stigma surrounding sexual violence adds an extra layer of suffering and silence.”

Save the Children revealed in a June report that at least 1,938 children were subjected to catastrophic sexual violence in 2024 — the highest number of verified cases since records began. The figure marks a staggering 50 percent increase since 2020.

“To normalize this level of violence against children is to accept the dismantling of our collective humanity,” Helen Pattinson, CEO of War Child UK, said in a statement. “The level of alarm is unprecedented. Governments must act immediately to turn the tide of grief, trauma and loss borne by children.”

For millions of children growing up under siege, survival alone is no longer enough. What they need is safety, justice, and a chance to dream again.

“No child should have to carry the weight of mass violence,” said Alhakim. “And yet far too many are.”

 


Trump to welcome Turkiye’s Erdogan, sees end to warplane row

Updated 14 sec ago
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Trump to welcome Turkiye’s Erdogan, sees end to warplane row

Trump to welcome Turkiye’s Erdogan, sees end to warplane row
It will be the first visit to the White House by Erdogan since 2019
Trump announced that Erdogan will visit the White House on Thursday

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said Friday he will welcome Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to the White House next week and expects a resolution to a long-running rift on fighter-jets.
It will be the first visit to the White House by Erdogan since 2019 during Trump’s first term, with former president Joe Biden having a tense relationship with the Turkish leader he accused of autocratic behavior.
Trump announced that Erdogan will visit the White House on Thursday, after the two leaders participate at the UN General Assembly in New York.
During Trump’s first term, the United States booted Turkiye, a NATO ally, out of its flagship F-35 fighter-jet program.
The first Trump administration took the action after Turkiye defiantly bought Russia’s S-400 surface-to-air missile defense system, raising fears that NATO’s main adversary would seize a window into Western jet operations.
“We are working on many Trade and Military Deals with the President, including the large scale purchase of Boeing aircraft, a major F-16 Deal, and a continuation of the F-35 talks, which we expect to conclude positively,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
“I look forward to seeing him on the 25th!” he said.

Nepal interim PM vows to fix ‘failure’ that led to deadly Gen Z protests

Nepal interim PM vows to fix ‘failure’ that led to deadly Gen Z protests
Updated 16 min 44 sec ago
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Nepal interim PM vows to fix ‘failure’ that led to deadly Gen Z protests

Nepal interim PM vows to fix ‘failure’ that led to deadly Gen Z protests
  • Sushila Karki said the government was committed to creating employment, raising the quality of life and increasing transparency in its work

KATMANDU: Nepal’s interim prime minister pledged on Friday to fight corruption, create jobs and raise living standards in her first public comments since coming to office after youth-led protests toppled the government.

Sushila Karki said the protests — that left at least 72 people dead and forced her predecessor K.P. Sharma Oli to quit — had been triggered by frustration over growing corruption and other failings. Authorities have said more than 2,100 people were injured in the unrest that raged for two days last week. Arson and vandalism caused extensive damage to private and public property, including the complex housing the prime minister’s office, the Supreme Court and the parliament.

HIGHLIGHT

Arson and vandalism caused extensive damage to private and public property, including the complex housing the prime minister’s office, the Supreme Court and the parliament.

“We must accept the fact that the protests took place because of the failure to fulfill the spirit and objectives of providing good governance and prosperity enshrined in the constitution,” Karki said.

She spoke on Nepal’s national day, marking the 10th anniversary of the proclamation of the constitution.

The former Supreme Court chief justice was appointed to the post last week following talks between representatives of the protesters, the president and the army chief Karki — the first woman to lead Nepal — was tasked with holding parliamentary elections on March 5.

She said the government was committed to creating employment, raising the quality of life and increasing transparency in its work.

Losses from the damage could reach $1 billion to $1.5 billion, Kulman Ghising, minister for energy, physical infrastructure, transport and urban development, said.

Ghising visited some public buildings set ablaze in the capital Katmandu and appealed to Nepalis at home and abroad to contribute to the reconstruction.

A Supreme Court official said some hearings were taking place in tents as most court structures, documents and IT systems were destroyed during the unrest.

Police spokesperson Binod Ghimire said officers had received more than 30,000 emails after asking the public to send in videos, photographs and other documents to help them investigate the violence.

The unrest has heightened risks to Nepal’s economic and fiscal outlook and may pressure its credit metrics, rating firm Fitch said on Friday.

 


Death toll from tanker truck explosion in Mexico City rises to 22

Death toll from tanker truck explosion in Mexico City rises to 22
Updated 19 September 2025
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Death toll from tanker truck explosion in Mexico City rises to 22

Death toll from tanker truck explosion in Mexico City rises to 22
  • The tragedy has sparked widespread anger and drawn renewed attention to safety conditions on Mexico’s highways
  • “25 people remain hospitalized, 37 have been discharged, and tragically, 22 people have died,” Mexico City Health Ministry reported

MEXICO CITY: The death toll from an explosion involving a tanker truck carrying liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) in Mexico’s capital has climbed to 22, the city’s Health Ministry said.

The tragedy has sparked widespread anger and drawn renewed attention to safety conditions on Mexico’s highways, prompting calls for tighter oversight of hazardous cargo transport and road maintenance.

The fatalities have been steadily rising since Wednesday last week, when the truck burst into flames and exploded while traveling on a busy highway in Iztapalapa, Mexico City’s most populous borough.

“Regarding the Iztapalapa incident, we can confirm that 25 people remain hospitalized, 37 have been discharged, and tragically, 22 people have died,” Mexico City Health Ministry reported late Thursday.

The driver passed away this week. A two-year-old girl remains among the injured and was transferred last week to a US hospital in Galveston, Texas.

Initial investigations by city authorities suggested that the driver’s excessive speed and lack of skill caused the accident. Probes are ongoing.

The truck, carrying around 50,000 liters of LPG, overturned and crashed into retaining walls.

A rupture allowed gas to escape, leading to a massive explosion and a fire that engulfed about 30 vehicles.


Estonia says 3 Russian fighter jets entered its airspace in ‘brazen’ incursion

Estonia says 3 Russian fighter jets entered its airspace in ‘brazen’ incursion
Updated 19 September 2025
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Estonia says 3 Russian fighter jets entered its airspace in ‘brazen’ incursion

Estonia says 3 Russian fighter jets entered its airspace in ‘brazen’ incursion
  • Tsakhna said that Russia violated Estonian airspace four times this year “but today’s incursion, involving three fighter aircraft entering our airspace, is unprecedentedly brazen”
  • Kallas called Friday’s incursion “an extremely dangerous provocation” that “further escalates tensions in the region”

TALINN: Estonia summoned a Russian diplomat to protest after three Russian fighter aircraft entered its airspace without permission Friday and stayed there for 12 minutes, the Foreign Ministry said, just over a week after NATO planes downed Russian drones over Poland and heightened fears that the war in Ukraine could spill over.

Foreign Minister Margus Tsakhna said that Russia violated Estonian airspace four times this year “but today’s incursion, involving three fighter aircraft entering our airspace, is unprecedentedly brazen.”

Russian officials did not immediately comment.

Russia’s violation of Poland’s airspace was the most serious cross-border incident into a NATO member country since the war in Ukraine began with Russia’s all-out invasion in February 2022. Other alliance countries have reported similar incursions and drone crashes on their territory.

The developments have increasingly rattled European governments as US-led efforts to stop the war in Ukraine have come to nothing.


The European Union’s foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas called Friday’s incursion “an extremely dangerous provocation” that “further escalates tensions in the region.”
Estonia, along with other Baltic states Lithuania and Latvia, are seen as being among the most likely targets if Russia one day decides to risk an attack on NATO. Neighboring Poland, though much larger, also feels vulnerable. All four countries are staunch supporters of Ukraine.
Italian F-35 fighter jets respond to Russian incursion
The Russian MIG-31 fighters entered Estonian airspace in the area of Vaindloo Island, which is a small island located in the Gulf of Finland in the Baltic Sea, the Estonian military said in a separate statement.
The aircraft did not have flight plans and their transponders were turned off, the statement said, nor were the aircraft in two-way radio communication with Estonian air traffic services.
Italian Air Force F-35 fighter jets, currently deployed as part of the NATO Baltic Air Policing Mission, responded to the incident, according to the statement.
Separately, Maj. Taavi Karotamm, spokesperson for Estonian Defense Forces, told The Associated Press the Russian planes flew parallel to the Estonian border from East to West and did not head toward the country’s capital Tallinn.
“Russia’s increasingly extensive testing of boundaries and growing aggressiveness must be met with a swift increase in political and economic pressure,” Tsakhna, the foreign minister, said.
The Russian charge d’affaires was summoned and given a protest note, a ministry statement said.
British spy chief says ‘no evidence’ Putin wants peace
Earlier Friday, the head of Britain’s foreign intelligence agency said there is “absolutely no evidence” that Russia’s President Vladimir Putin wants to negotiate peace in Ukraine.
Richard Moore, chief of the Secret Intelligence Service, or MI6 as it is more commonly known, said Putin was “stringing us along.”
“He seeks to impose his imperial will by all means at his disposal. But he cannot succeed,” Moore said. “Bluntly, Putin has bitten off more than he can chew. He thought he was going to win an easy victory. But he – and many others – underestimated the Ukrainians.”
The war has continued unabated in the three years since Russia invaded its neighbor. Ukraine has accepted proposals for a ceasefire and a summit meeting, but Moscow has demurred.
US President Donald Trump said Thursday during a state visit to the United Kingdom that Putin ” has really let me down ” in peace efforts.
Putin is ‘mortgaging the future’ of Russia
Moore was speaking at the British consulate in Istanbul after five years as head of MI6. He leaves the post at the end of September. The agency will then get its first female chief.
Moore said the invasion had strengthened Ukrainian national identity and accelerated its westward trajectory, as well as pushing Sweden and Finland to join NATO.
“Putin has sought to convince the world that Russian victory is inevitable. But he lies. He lies to the world. He lies to his people. Perhaps he even lies to himself,” Moore told a news conference.
He said that Putin was “mortgaging his country’s future for his own personal legacy and a distorted version of history” and the war was “accelerating this decline.”
Analysts say Putin believes he can outlast the political commitment of Ukraine’s Western partners and win a protracted war of attrition by wearing down Ukraine’s smaller army with sheer weight of numbers.
Ukraine, meanwhile, is racing to expand its defense cooperation with other countries and secure billions of dollars of investment in its domestic weapons industry.
MI6 unveils dark web portal
The spy chief was speaking as MI6 unveiled a dark web portal to allow potential intelligence providers to contact the service. Dubbed ” Silent Courier,” the secure messaging platform aims to recruit new spies for the UK, including in Russia.
“To those men and women in Russia who have truths to share and the courage to share them, I invite you to contact MI6,” Moore said.
Not just Russians but “anyone, anywhere in the world” would be able to use the portal to offer sensitive information on terrorism or “hostile intelligence activity,” he said.


Canada bans Irish rap group Kneecap over alleged support for terrorist groups

Canada bans Irish rap group Kneecap over alleged support for terrorist groups
Updated 19 September 2025
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Canada bans Irish rap group Kneecap over alleged support for terrorist groups

Canada bans Irish rap group Kneecap over alleged support for terrorist groups
  • Vince Gasparro, Canada’s parliamentary secretary for combatting crime, said in a video on X that the members of the group have been deemed ineligible to enter the country
  • Gasparro said the group has publicly displayed support for terrorist organizations, including Hezbollah and Hamas

OTTAWA: Canada has barred Irish rap trio Kneecap from entering the country ahead of its scheduled concerts next month, accusing the band of promoting hate and violence and supporting terrorist groups, a member of the Liberal government announced on Friday.

Belfast-based Kneecap, who regularly display pro-Palestinian messages during their gigs, have caused controversy elsewhere. At the Glastonbury Festival in southwest England in June, frontman Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh — known by the stage name Mo Chara — accused Israel of committing war crimes. Israel has denied such accusations.

Vince Gasparro, Canada’s parliamentary secretary for combatting crime, said in a video on X that the members of the group have been deemed ineligible to enter the country because of actions and statements that violate Canadian law.


He said the group has amplified political violence and has publicly displayed support for terrorist organizations, including Iran-backed Lebanese militant group Hezbollah and Hamas, the Palestinian militant group that controls Gaza.
“Advocating for political violence, glorifying terrorist organizations and displaying hate symbols that directly target the Jewish community are not protected forms of expression and will not be tolerated by our government,” Gasparro said.
Kneecap’s manager and international booking agent didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Canada’s immigration ministry didn’t immediately respond to a request for more details.
The band has said previously that its members do not support Hamas or Hezbollah, and that it condemns “all attacks on civilians, always.” In May, Ó hAnnaidh was charged with a terrorism offense in Britain for allegedly displaying a flag in support of Hezbollah during a performance in London in November 2024. He denies the offense, saying the flag was thrown on stage during its performance. In August, Kneecap canceled its 15-date US tour scheduled for October, citing the proximity of Ó hAnnaidh’s London court hearing.
Kneecap had four Canadian concerts scheduled in October, two in Toronto and two in Vancouver, according to its website.