Hundreds of boys and girls have been killed or injured over the past two years amid the deteriorating political and security situation in Afghanistan, says a UN report.

The report on Children and Armed Conflict issued on Monday, a day after the Taliban consolidated control over the country found that 5,770 Afghan youngsters were killed or maimed between January 2019 and December 2020.

Meanwhile, the study stated that child casualties hit their highest levels ever during the first half of 2021.

Virginia Gamba, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict, said Afghanistan continued to be one of the most dangerous places to be a child.

“I am appalled by the continuing and rising high levels of violence endured by children in Afghanistan, including those caught up in combat.

“As the already dramatic situation continues to evolve rapidly and concerning reports of human rights violations keep arising, I call for all abuses to stop.

“I urge the Taliban and all other parties to abide by their obligations under international humanitarian law and international human rights law, as well as by national commitments and protect the lives and rights of all people, including those of women and girls,” she said.

The research revealed that during the reporting period, one in three casualties was a child.

Armed groups, particularly the Taliban, were responsible for most incidents, or 46 per cent, with government and pro-government forces accounting for 35 per cent, followed by landmines and explosive remnants of war.

“It is urgent that all parties take the necessary actions to minimise harm to children and prioritise their protection in the conduct of hostilities as well as protect schools and hospitals.

“Such harm is otherwise bound to affect generations to come, when Afghan children have already had their childhood taken away from them.

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“With figures already alarmingly high and the Taliban identified in the report as a major perpetrator of violence against children, the future of children, especially girls in Afghanistan is dark,” Gamba said.

The UN also verified more than 6,470 grave violations against children during the reporting period, with nearly half attributed to the Taliban. Some 297 attacks on schools and hospitals were also verified.

Despite a decrease in assaults on schools, the report’s authors noted that attacks on hospitals and protected personnel rose, which they found particularly egregious, given the fragile state of the Afghan healthcare system and the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic.

According to Gamba, deliberate Taliban attacks on girls’ schools remain “a worrisome trend.”

She appealed to the group, and all other parties to the conflict, to respect human rights, including the right to education for girls.

Warring sides, mainly the Taliban, also recruited 260 boys into the hostilities, mostly in combat roles.

Gamba explained that the pandemic exacerbated boys’ vulnerability: a situation she said would deepen given the current levels of violence.

“Today, I call on all parties, especially the Taliban, to prevent recruitment and use, abduction, and the killing and maiming of children and to cease all violations and urgently take concrete measures to protect children, schools, and hospitals, and mitigate child casualties,” she said.

The UN Special Representative further called for Afghanistan to uphold the criminalisation of the practice of “bacha bazi,” a form of sexual abuse against boys, in line with revisions to the penal code in 2018.

She stressed that true protection for Afghanistan’s children will only come through peaceful resolution of the conflict.

“I call on all parties, especially the Taliban today, to ensure that child protection issues are prioritised by all actors involved in peace negotiations to sustainably prevent grave violations against children from occurring again and contribute to enhancing the viability of peace,”Gamba said. (NAN)