Cambodia: UN-backed report reveals scope of violence against children
UN News Centre | 22 October 2014
Over half of Cambodian children have experienced
at least one form of violence before the age of 18 while roughly a
quarter have been emotionally abused, a new United Nations-backed survey
has revealed, exploring the magnitude and nature of violence against
children in the Southeast Asian country.
The first assessment of its kind in East Asia and the Pacific region,
Cambodia’s Violence against Children Survey (CVACS) asked 2,376 children
and young people aged 13 to 24 from across the country about their
experiences of physical, emotional and sexual violence before the age of
18.
Speaking
at the report’s launch in the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh, Marta
Santos Pais, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative on
Violence against Children, praised the Government for conducting the
“ground-breaking” survey and encouraged it to integrate the findings
into its overall policy agenda.
“The elimination of all forms of violence against children must be a
core indicator of national social improvement,” Ms. Santos Pais
declared.
“It should be a reference for all Government sectors, for the budget and
for relevant coordinating mechanisms, with a clear monitoring and
evaluation plan to assess progress and maintain momentum,” she added.
According to CVACS, the impact violence has on children resonates long
after the abuse has ended and can affect the quality of their lives in
the long-term. Many young victims experience short term health
consequences and risk taking behaviour, with those who experience
violence more likely to report moderate mental distress, sexually
transmitted infections, self-harm and suicidal thoughts. Other physical
and mental health problems may linger on throughout their lives.
Ms. Santos Pais outlined six steps which she said would help governments
address violence against children and work to eliminate it outright,
including the enacting of an explicit legal ban on violence against
children backed by effective enforcement; increased efforts to make
violence against children socially unacceptable; ensuring the social
inclusion of girls and boys who are at special risk; building or
enhancing strong data systems and sound evidence to prevent and address
violence against children; and joining with other governments to ensure
the protection of children from violence as part of the post-2015
international development agenda.
“The economic returns from investment in early child development are now
well established, yet violence severely limits young children from
reaching their full potential resulting in huge losses to society,” Ms.
Santos Pais continued.
“Ending violence is an ethical imperative, but it also makes economic sense as the figures on the costs of violence show.”
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