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More than nine out of 10 refugee and migrant children arriving in Europe this year through Italy are unaccompanied, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) reported on Tuesday, warning of the growing threats of abuse, exploitation, and death that such children are facing.
A UNICEF report, entitled: “Danger Every Step of the Way”, found that 7,009 unaccompanied children made the crossing from North Africa to Italy in the first five months of the year, twice as many as this past years.
Ms. Marie-Pierre Poirier, UNICEF Special Coordinator for Refugees and Migrants, said: “It is a silent and desperate situation – out of sight and out of mind. Yet tens of thousands of children face danger every day and hundreds of thousands more are prepared to risk everything.”
She noted that the report documents the risks that adolescents take in their flight to escape conflict, despair, and poverty. Unaccompanied children generally rely on human smugglers, often under a system of ‘pay as you go’, which opens them to exploitation.
The UNICEF official said a total of 2,809 deaths were recorded in the Mediterranean between January 1, and June 5, 2016, as compared with 3,770 for the whole of 2015, and the vast majority were on the Central Mediterranean route, and many were children.
Ms. Poirier also said that some adolescents are sexually abused and exploited. Italian social workers told the agency that both girls and boys were sexually assaulted and forced into prostitution while in Libya and that some of the girls were pregnant when they arrived in Italy, having been raped.
“However, because of the illicit nature of human smuggling operations, there are no reliable figures to show how many of the refugees and migrants die, disappear into forced labor or prostitution, or linger in detention.
“With summer upon the Mediterranean, the latest numbers of children on the Central Mediterranean route may well be just the tip of the iceberg, and another 235,000 migrants are currently in Libya, tens of thousands of them unaccompanied children.
“Every country – those the children leave, those they cross and those in which they seek asylum – has an obligation to establish protection systems focused on the risks that unaccompanied children face,” she stated.
She added: “In the European Union and other destination countries, there is an opportunity for policy and legislative reforms to lead to more opportunities for safe, legal and regular channels for these children.”