Daily Archives: March 11, 2022

UN rights office has credible reports of Russian cluster bomb use in Ukraine – Financial Post

Posted: March 11, 2022 at 12:08 pm

GENEVA The U.N. human rights office said on Friday it has received credible reports of several cases of Russian forces using cluster munitions in populated areas in Ukraine, adding that indiscriminate use of such weapons might amount to war crimes.

Due to their wide area effects, the use of cluster munitions in populated areas is incompatible with the international humanitarian law principles governing the conduct of hostilities, spokesperson Liz Throssell told Geneva-based journalists.

We remind the Russian authorities that directing attacks against civilians and civilian objects, as well as so-called area bombardment in towns and villages and other forms of indiscriminate attacks, are prohibited under international law and may amount to war crimes.

Asked about a potential change in Facebook policy that would allow some users to call for violence against Russians and Russian soldiers, Throssell called it concerning and said her office would raise it with the company. (Reporting by Emma Farge; Editing by Alex Richardson)

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UN rights office has credible reports of Russian cluster bomb use in Ukraine - Financial Post

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Human Rights Council holds panel discussion on family reunification in the context of armed conflict and counter terrorism – World – ReliefWeb

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9 March 2022Afternoon

Concludes Interactive Dialogue with the Special Rapporteur in the Field of Cultural Rights and Starts Interactive Dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on the Sale and Sexual Exploitation of Children

The Human Rights Council this afternoon held the second part of its annual full-day meeting on the rights of the child with a panel discussion on family reunification in the context of armed conflict and counter terrorism. The Council also concluded an interactive dialogue with the Special Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights and started an interactive dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on the sale and sexual exploitation of children.

A video on family reunification in the context of armed conflict was played at the beginning of the panel discussion.

Virginia Gamba, Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict, said conflict was one of the major drivers of family separation. The risk for children to be recruited and used by conflict parties was further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the deteriorating security situation in some contexts. The international community must ensure that a child rights-based approach was taken when dealing with children associated or allegedly associated with armed groups. No matter what the context, every person under 18 years of age was considered a child under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.

Cornelius Williams, Director of Child Protection for the United Nations Childrens Fund, said that unaccompanied and separated children were among the most vulnerable children in the world. Governments should provide social support, case work, and inclusive educational and livelihood opportunities, and develop legal and policy frameworks that supported family resilience and prevented separation. States should prioritise the safe and swift handover of any child they encountered during counter terrorism or military operations to child protection actors instead of placing them in detention.

Fionnuala N Aolin, Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights while countering terrorism, said her mandate increasingly addressed issues related to the rights of the child as it intersected with countering terrorism, violent extremism and broader security policies and measures. According to international law, States must treat children, including children related to or associated with designated terrorist groups, primarily as victims when devising responses, including counter-terrorism responses.

Helen Durham, Director of International Law and Policy, International Committee of the Red Cross, said that being separated from your loved ones as war unfurled around you was a terrifying reality for thousands of children. International humanitarian law contained obligations that sought to ensure that when a child was separated from their family in armed conflict, their needs were met. These obligations also sought to maintain or restore contact and ultimately achieve the reunification of family members when possible. Better respect for these rules would help stem harm to the children.

In the discussion, speakers agreed that the family was the optimal environment to raise children, therefore a united or reunited family was indispensable. Children had the right to live in healthy families and family reunification was a sine qua non condition for the proper growth of a child. Speakers condemned the recruitment of children in armed groups and during conflicts. Armed conflicts and terrorism prevented the enjoyment of human rights of citizens, and children were particularly at risk. The protection of women and children in those contexts was paramount as girls were impacted differently and disproportionately by armed conflict.

Speaking in the discussion were the European Union, Portugal on behalf of the Community of Portuguese-speaking Countries, Qatar, Ghana, Azerbaijan, Cuba, UN Women, United Kingdom, Indonesia, Venezuela, Russian Federation, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan.

Also speaking were Save the Children International, Plan International, Amnesty International, Beijing Childrens Legal Aid and Research Centre, and China Soong Ching Ling Foundation.

At the beginning of the meeting, the Council concluded its interactive dialogue with Alexandra Xanthaki, Special Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights. The interactive dialogue started on Tuesday, 8 March and a summary can be found here and here.

In the discussion with the Special Rapporteur on cultural rights, speakers said that the situation in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip impeded Palestinians from enjoying their cultural rights. Member States should recognise the unlawful destruction of Palestinian heritage. Others said the importance of women in upholding culture should be recognised. The pandemic had seriously affected the enjoyment of cultural rights by indigenous peoples and communities.

In her concluding remarks, Ms. Xanthaki said that she was paying particular attention to linguistic and cultural minorities. She would also focus on the link between cultural rights and sustainable development. Cultural rights were important because they acted as resources of the past but they should not be stuck in the past as they evolved as societies and communities evolved. They were not static, they evolved according to the wishes of the individuals and the communities.

Speaking were the following non-governmental organizations: Al-Haq, Law at the Service of Man, Rencontre Africaine pour la Dfense des Droits de lHomme, and Association for the Defence of Human Rights and the Cultural Rights of the Azerbaijani People.

The Council then started an interactive discussion with Mama Fatima Singhateh, Special Rapporteur on the sale and sexual exploitation of children.

Ms. Singhateh said that one of the key challenges to addressing the sale and sexual exploitation of children at the national level was the inadequate implementation of existing laws and policies. From the contributions received, in terms of preventing the sale and sexual exploitation of children, besides having an adequate legal and policy framework in place, education and awareness-raising were the most frequent measures mentioned. What was often lacking was a systemic and comprehensive approach to such prevention measures and the lack of nationwide coverage. Preventing the sale and sexual exploitation of children therefore required a strong and sustained national commitment, coupled with meaningful community involvement and programmes to establish viable alternatives for children and families at risk. She spoke about her country visit to Montenegro.

Montenegro spoke as a country concerned.

In the ensuing discussion, speakers shared concerns regarding States without robust legal frameworks to incorporate new trends in child protection. The international community had to work harder to support national efforts to eliminate child sale, prostitution, trafficking and pornography. Addressing the sale and abuse of children required a strong national effort, combined with efforts aimed at supporting the family structure, in order to eliminate risks at the earliest possible level. Adequate implementation and safeguard measures should be put in place to ensure that children did not fall through the gaps in infrastructure that could exist.

Speaking on the sale and sexual exploitation of children were: European Union, Uruguay (on behalf of a group of countries), Latvia (on behalf of a group of countries), China (on behalf of a group of countries), Paraguay, Egypt, Philippines, Israel, UN Women, Libya, Fiji, United Nations Childrens Fund, Venezuela, France, Malaysia, Iraq, Cuba, India and Luxembourg.

Speaking in right of reply were: Armenia, Cuba and Azerbaijan

The webcast of the Human Rights Council meetings can be found here. All meeting summaries can be found here. Documents and reports related to the Human Rights Councils forty-ninth regular session can be found here.

The Council will next meet at 9 a.m. on Thursday, 10 March to hold a panel discussion on access to COVID-19 vaccines. It will then conclude its interactive dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on the sale and sexual exploitation of children, and hold an interactive dialogue with the Independent Expert on the effects of foreign debt.

Interactive Dialogue with the Special Rapporteur in the Field of Cultural Rights

The interactive dialogue with Alexandra Xanthaki, Special Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights, started on Tuesday, 8 March and a summary can be found here and here.

Discussion

In the discussion with the Special Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights, some speakers said that the situation in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip impeded Palestinians from enjoying their cultural rights. Member States should recognise the unlawful destruction of Palestinian heritage. Others said the importance of women in upholding culture should be recognised. The pandemic had seriously affected the enjoyment of cultural rights by indigenous peoples and communities. States should increase the budgets for culture - there should be sustainable solutions for development programmes for cultural rights for minorities in the case of future pandemics, and for how countries suffering from climate change could better defend their heritage.

Concluding Remarks

ALEXANDRA XANTHAKI, Special Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights, said she was paying particular attention to linguistic and cultural minorities. She would also focus on the link between cultural rights and sustainable development. She had taken note of the discussion on the danger of nuclear testing and danger in general. Cultural rights were important because they acted as resources of the past but they should not be stuck in the past as they evolved as societies and communities evolved. It was important to use them in order to build the present. They were not static, they evolved according to the wishes of the individuals and the communities.

Interactive Dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on the Sale and Sexual Exploitation of Children, including Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and other Child Sexual Abuse Material

Documentation

The Council has before it (A/HRC/49/51) report of the Special Rapporteur on the sale and sexual exploitation of children on a practical approach to addressing the sale and sexual exploitation of children as well as (A/HRC/49/51 Add.1) on her mission to Montenegro.

Presentation of Reports

MAMA FATIMA SINGHATEH, Special Rapporteur on the sale and sexual exploitation of children, including child prostitution, child pornography and other child sexual abuse material, said her annual thematic report entitled a practical approach to addressing the sale and sexual exploitation of children was a study that provided a set of concrete measures and good practices collected from across the world, to tackle the sale of children for the purpose of child marriage and the sexual exploitation of children in prostitution, in the context of travel and tourism, and online. She would also be presenting the report on her country visit to Montenegro in September 2021.

Her annual report was addressed in the context of prevention, protection and rehabilitation services. There was no gainsaying that there existed a wealth of international and regional instruments as well as literature aimed at promoting the rights of children and protecting them from all forms of violence, including sale and sexual exploitation. However, the incidences of the sale, sexual abuse and sexual exploitation of children continued to increase and many child victims did not receive adequate support. One of the key challenges to addressing the sale and sexual exploitation of children at the national level was the inadequate implementation of the existing laws and policies. This report therefore offered a more practical approach to addressing this problem to ensure the effective implementation of prevention, protection and rehabilitation measures for children.

From the contributions received, in terms of preventing the sale and sexual exploitation of children, besides having an adequate legal and policy framework in place, education and awareness-raising were the most frequent measures mentioned by States and other stakeholders as good practices. However, what was often lacking was a systemic and comprehensive approach to such prevention measures and the lack of nationwide coverage. Preventing the sale and sexual exploitation of children therefore required a strong and sustained national commitment, coupled with meaningful community involvement and programmes to establish viable alternatives for children and families at risk.

With regard to the protection of children from sale and sexual exploitation, the numerous examples of good practices related to the training of professionals, the importance of closing the gap between the number of offences, of prosecutions undertaken and of convictions handed down for sexual offences against children, as well as treating children as victims, never as culprits. Other protection measures reported consisted of international cooperation.

The Special Rapporteur encouraged States to promote and support the adoption of a child protection policy in all public and private sectors and entities working with, for, or in contact with children. States were also encouraged to take a more sustainable perspective in regard to justice and rehabilitation services by providing yearly budgetary allocations for child victims in order to ensure that no child was left behind and that concrete and practical measures and services were available and accessible to all children as well as guaranteeing a child friendly, trauma informed approach to justice, support and rehabilitation of child victims of sale and sexual exploitation.

With regard to her mission to Montenegro, the Special Rapporteur commended the Government of Montenegro for significant efforts, despite a lack of reliable, centralised, and disaggregated data on the phenomena of child sexual abuse and sexual exploitation which made it difficult to determine the nature and prevalence of the problem. However, she had learned that child sexual exploitation and abuse was most prevalent among children belonging to marginalised communities. There was therefore the need for the Government of Montenegro to continue investing in social, economic and other measures, particularly for marginalised communities.

Statement of Country Concerned

Montenegro, speaking as the country concerned, thanked the Special Rapporteur for her visit to Montenegro, and commended her for her open and professional commitment. The report was constructive, and its recommendations helpful. Montenegro was consistently working to improve the human rights in its country, and cooperated with all Special Procedures, strengthening cooperation with civil society and other partners. Montenegro had adopted a number of strategies and protocols, including on forced early marriages. The authorities were committed to continuing to develop the legislative and institutional frameworks and ensure that policies were in place to implement them. Much of the national legislative framework was in line with international human rights instruments. Nevertheless, further measures needed to be taken to streamline implementation.

Montenegro was mindful that the complex nature of sexual abuse required a holistic and multi-disciplinary approach to rehabilitate the victims of this scourge, and the Government was taking steps in that regard. The Special Rapporteurs general finding was that Montenegro had made significant efforts to improve its protection for children against violence and sexual exploitation, nevertheless, there was still work to be done, and Montenegro would continue to cooperate with the Special Rapporteur and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in order to ensure effective implementation of the measures.

Discussion

In the ensuing discussion, Speakers highlighted the importance of a multidisciplinary approach on all levels and shared concerns regarding States without robust legal frameworks to incorporate new trends in child protection. It was of great importance to have tools that allowed for the active involvement of children as well as proper training for anyone who came in contact with children. Children must be protected and allowed to enjoy their fundamental rights. Adequate implementation and safeguard measures should be put in place to ensure that children did not fall through the gaps in infrastructure that could exist. The pandemic had had negative effects on childrens safety online, as they had spent more time in front of computers. The sustained effect of the pandemic on sexual exploitation online was of particular concern.

Speakers strongly condemned the sale of children and committed at all levels to eradicate it. The sale of children, aided by new technologies, continued to rise. Children should be educated about acceptable and non-acceptable acts, both online and offline. Child sexual exploitation had also become more prevalent during the pandemic. Child victims and survivors should be given access to justice, whilst avoiding secondary victimisation. Many children were trafficked into sweatshops, domestic work, or enforced prostitution, and the effects of this stayed with them for life. Hate crimes and racism had exacerbated trafficking. All States should combat trafficking, and bring the perpetrators to justice. There should be zero tolerance for trafficking in children.

The report contained a broad range of tools to protect and prevent children from being the victims of trafficking and sale, as well as measures for protecting the most vulnerable. States should have a robust political and legislative framework, but also include new trends, which were necessary in the accelerating digital world, as well as a national systemic approach to all aspects of the issue. Proper training should be provided for anyone in contact with children. The international community had to work harder to support national efforts to eliminate child sale, prostitution, trafficking and pornography. The dialogue with the Special Rapporteur should be spread through all levels of society, including civil society organizations, faith-based organizations, and educational institutions, in order to ensure that all parts of society were brought in to combat the scourge. Addressing the sale and abuse of children required a strong national effort, combined with efforts aimed at supporting the family structure, in order to eliminate risks at the earliest possible level.

Annual Full-Day Meeting on the Rights of the Child Panel Discussion on the Rights of the Child and Family Reunification, with a Focus on Family Reunification in the Context of Armed Conflict and Counter Terrorism Statements by Panellists

VIRGINIA GAMBA, Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict, said conflict was one of the major drivers of family separation. Children were the most vulnerable victims of conflict and at risk of suffering multiple violations and abuses of their rights, including for instance separation from their parents or caregivers because of child abduction and/or recruitment and use by parties to conflict. Conflict-affected children were also frequently victims of transnational crimes and were recruited, abducted, and trafficked across borders, making family tracing and reunification even more challenging. The latest report of the Secretary-General on children and armed conflict published in May 2021 reported a 90 per cent increase in the number of abducted children. Abductions were often carried out in conjunction with child recruitment and use by armed forces and groups or rape and other forms of sexual violence perpetrated against them. The risk for children to be recruited and used by conflict parties was further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the deteriorating security situation in some contexts.

The international community must ensure that a child rights-based approach was taken when dealing with children associated or allegedly associated with armed groups, including those designated as terrorist groups by the United Nations. No matter what the context, every person under 18 years of age was considered a child under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. This status as a child provided boys and girls with specific rights and protection under international law. Amongst the rights they held, children should not be detained merely because of their alleged association with armed groups, including those designated as terrorist groups by the United Nations, as alternatives to detention should always be prioritised. Those principles must be the basis of any policy and action related to children. In the case of judicial or administrative proceedings affecting children, their opinion must be heard in accordance with their age and maturity. To effectively uphold the best interests of children released or otherwise separated from armed forces or groups, including those designated as terrorist groups by the United Nations, they should be handed over swiftly to civilian child protection actors.

CORNELIUS WILLIAMS, Director of Child Protection for the United Nations Childrens Fund, said that during armed conflicts, mass population displacements, mixed-migration contexts, and other humanitarian crises, children were at risk of separation from their families. Unaccompanied and separated children were among the most vulnerable children in the world, often deprived of basic care and access to essential services. Having lost the protection of their families, they were at risk of physical and psychological harm, abduction, trafficking, and recruitment or use by armed forces or armed groups, sexual abuse and exploitation, and permanent loss of their identity and nationality, among other rights. In 2020, the United Nations Childrens Fund and its partners registered over 180,000 unaccompanied and separated children for support across the world. From a gender perspective, there were more adolescent boys than girls living without parental care. This was true because, due to social and cultural norms, girls were often kept closer to the family, while boys were sent to migrate internally or across borders, to work or to study. It was also true because boys, more often than girls, were recruited and used by armed forces or armed groups, including designated terrorist groups. In this context, the United Nations Childrens Fund was deeply concerned that childrens right to family life was not adequately fulfilled, either before, during or after situations of armed conflict, and counter terrorism operations.

Governments should provide social support, case work, and inclusive educational and livelihood opportunities, and develop legal and policy frameworks that supported family resilience and prevented separation, strengthened family-based care, and ended institutionalisation of children, said Mr. Williams. Humanitarian child protection actors must establish systems to identify unaccompanied and separated children and swiftly trace and restore links between them and their families, while also supporting safe alternative care, reunification and reintegration. Policymakers, security and justice actors must work together to end the detention of children. In this regard, States should prioritise the safe and swift handover of any child they encountered during counter terrorism or military operations to child protection actors instead of placing them in detention. In conclusion, Mr. Williams called on duty bearers to do everything they could to realise childrens rights to family life by preventing family-child separation and reunifying any separated child with their family in the context of armed conflict and counter-terrorism operations.

FIONNUALA N AOLIN, Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights while countering terrorism, said her mandate increasingly addressed issues related to the rights of the child as it intersected with countering terrorism, violent extremism and broader security policies and measures. An intersectional approach to reflecting the experiences of children in these contexts demonstrated how discrimination and human rights abuses intersected and were compounded as determined by other social identities, including race, ethnicity, religion, ability, age and so on. Children, both girls and boys, bore heavy and unseen burdens resulting from the direct and indirect impacts of security practices, not least because any prevention effort in the pre-criminal or the pre-terrorist space could have a specific focus on children and render children as suspect on the basis of religious or ethnic belonging, geographic location and gender. According to international law, States must treat children, including children related to or associated with designated terrorist groups, primarily as victims when devising responses, including counter-terrorism responses. Children were always considered vulnerable and in need of special protection.

Turning specifically to the issue of children of individuals with alleged links to ISIL, particularly in the context of northeast Syria, the mandate had underscored the multiple human rights and humanitarian law violations that children suffered from as a result of their detention, both in the camps as well as in the prisons and other detention centres, including so-called rehabilitation centres. Extending the arm of counter-terrorism to children allegedly associated with non-state armed groups designated as terrorist shifted the discourse from protection to punishment, from protected victim to security threat. In turn, this also changed the protection to which they were entitled, notably regarding detention, applicability of criminal law and treatment under criminal justice, as well as their rights, away from a child right perspective and the question of responsibility for violations of the rights of the child, including recruitment and use. Children could only be detained as a measure of last resort and for the shortest amount of time possible.

Contrary to international law, multiple States had engaged in citizenship stripping on a basis that appeared primarily to involve the prevention of return of the individual (and possibly their children) to their country of citizenship. In such circumstances, the withdrawal of citizenship appeared distinctly punitive. Citizenship stripping could control and define on security grounds who may legally benefit from family membership, which revealed the profound connection being forged between family regulation and contemporary security policy. The protection of the rights of the family in all its diverse forms constituted a distinct and complex agenda within the international legal framework for the protection and promotion of human rights.

HELEN DURHAM, Director of International Law and Policy, International Committee of the Red Cross, said that being separated from your loved ones as war unfurled around you was a terrifying reality for thousands of children. From Rakhine state, to northwest Iraq, to Niger, to Afghanistan, to Ethiopia thousands of children were in situations of prolonged displacement. Especially when unaccompanied, they may be left without access to education, nutrition or healthcare. In many conflicts, children were recruited by armed forces or armed groups, separated from caregivers and communities, and exposed to a multitude of violations. For several years now in northeast Syria, children had lived in camps or had been separated from their families and detained without due process, including as part of counter-terrorism measures. Family separation also occurred when States opted to repatriate children nationals present in a conflict zone while leaving their mothers behind. Separated from their parents or other family members, children were more likely to be at risk of exploitation and violence. They faced barriers in accessing essential services. This was a brief, but sobering highlight of some of the causes of separation that children in war faced today. In this grim reality, the international community must work for more effective application of the powerful protections of international law.

International humanitarian law contained obligations that sought to ensure that when a child was separated from their family in armed conflict, their needs were met. These obligations also sought to maintain or restore contact and ultimately achieve the reunification of family members when possible. Better respect for these rules would help stem harm to the children.

In conclusion, she made four recommendations to Members States. First, prevent separation in the first place. This required the maintenance of family unity to the degree possible, contact between family members, and the provision of information on their whereabouts. Second, quickly identify unaccompanied children. Identification helped to ensure their cases were followed up and their needs were met. Knowledge of their whereabouts helped prevent recruitment and avoided children resorting to harmful coping strategies to meet essential needs. Third, children detained in northeast Syria should be released and reunited with their families in camps or elsewhere. Foreign children should be repatriated together with their family members to countries of origin, subject to the principle of non-refoulement. Fourth, she called on States that had not done so to accede to the Convention on the Rights of the Childs Optional Protocol on children in armed conflict, and to endorse the Paris Principles on Children Associated with Armed Forces or Armed Groups.

Discussion

Speakers welcomed the convening of this panel discussion as they agreed that the family was the optimal environment to raise children, therefore a united or reunited family was indispensable. Children had the right to live in healthy families and family reunification was a sine qua non condition for the proper growth of a child. A comprehensive return process was vital, and for children who could not be reunited, countries had to provide inclusive care, education, health care and recreational activities.

Speakers condemned the recruitment of children in armed groups and during conflicts. Armed conflicts and terrorism prevented the enjoyment of human rights of citizens, and children were particularly at risk. It was essential to pay attention to children in vulnerable situations such as armed conflict; the disappearances and deaths of children during conflict needed to be investigated. The protection of women and children in those contexts was paramount as girls were impacted differently and disproportionately by armed conflict, therefore their specific needs needed to be taken into account. Children had a right to be with their families. Family life provided support for the lifelong development of children, therefore governments should adopt guidelines on preventing radicalisation.

All children were equal in dignity and rights and could not be overlooked. Concerns were expressed about children in Qatar, Afghanistan and Armenia, among others. Concerns were also expressed about the increase of sexual exploitation of children. Children were the future. All children should be released from detention. One speaker was concerned about the rights of migrant children in Europe as children on the move were subject to criminal processing and cruel and degrading treatments. Migrant children were particularly vulnerable, they were at risk of falling in the hand of criminal networks, an issue that needed to be tackled urgently.

Concluding Remarks

FIONNUALA N AOLIN, Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights while countering terrorism, said equal measures were needed to protect children equally, no matter which group was in question, and children should be seen as victims of terrorism, no matter which group targeted them, or the context they were in. One of her mandates particular concerns was ensuring that all children in all conflict zones were treated equally. Insufficient attention was paid to the long-term effects of family protection in post 9/11 measures as rolled out in many countries. It was important to stress accountability for crimes committed against children in areas of conflict. Protection should be sought for children at the national level through accountability at the national level, in particular in Syria. Every child was deserving of protection, and this motif defined the contributions of each panellist. Family-based care was valuable and had long-term success, and the attention should be paid to ensure that families were brought home together. When mothers were separated from their children and impossible choices were imposed on children, such as repatriation or separation, that choice was neither free nor fair, nor did it ensure long-term success. When children were enforcedly separated, the long-term damage done to children was often irreparable. States must ensure family integrity. Reintegration was a long-term process, and States must commit to the long-term with urgency.

CORNELIUS WILLIAMS, Director of Child Protection for the United Nations Childrens Fund, said that concerning the impact of the COVD-19 pandemic on reunification, movement restrictions, quarantines and isolation measures had delayed the reunification processes for children. There were some good practices within communities to provide support activities, including guidelines developed by civil society organizations on family reunification, which could support interventions in future pandemics. He echoed the calls to States to ratify the Convention on the Rights of the Childs Optional Protocol on children and armed conflict and the Paris Principles. He saluted community-based solutions as well as the calls of all the panellists for the safe repatriation of all children in conflict zones, consistent with international law, including the principle of non-refoulement. He also highlighted the need to be mindful of policies that had gender implications on policies around citizenship that rendered women and children stateless. Any policy needed to be designed from the child right perspective but also from the gender perspective.

HELEN DURHAM, Director of International Law and Policy, International Committee of the Red Cross, said the emphasis was on the urgency of the issue. It was heartening to hear from many who took the floor emphasising the need to treat children exclusively through a prism of security, and the good practices that had been heard from States on initiatives, including on voluntary repatriation. On a red thread that tied all interventions together, existing human rights law set out critical child rights, and there were international humanitarian laws setting out repatriation: these all highlighted the need for them to be applied without discrimination or selectivity. Often, as soon as a child was associated with a group designated as terrorist, selectivity and discrimination were applied. Laws had a sober rationale on how to deal with these, and established common ground on how to deal with future generations. All children were legally entitled to protections afforded under the Optional Protocol and other laws and standards. Policies should be applied in the best interests of children, including the protection of the family unit and the issue of swift repatriation. These should be implemented without discrimination. The fundamental issue was that a child was a child.

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Produced by the United Nations Information Service in Geneva for use of the information media;not an official record. English and French versions of our releases are different as they are the product of two separate coverage teams that work independently.

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Human Rights Council holds panel discussion on family reunification in the context of armed conflict and counter terrorism - World - ReliefWeb

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Im the Operator: The Aftermath of a Self-Driving Tragedy – WIRED

Posted: at 12:08 pm

Uber employees helped the cops find the right footage, which would go on to play a key role in the investigation: video of Vasquez in the drivers seat as the car navigated the route; then of Vasquez gazing down toward her right knee, toward the lower console. Her glances downward averaged 2.56 seconds, but on one early loop, on the same stretch of road where the crash would take place, she looked down for more than 26 seconds. At times, the investigators thought she seemed to smirk. In the seconds before the car hit Herzberg, Vasquez looked down for about five seconds. Just before impact, she looked up, and gasped.

The media descended on the story the next day. Right away, experts were quoted lambasting Arizonas lax regulatory environment, calling for a national moratorium on testing, and saying that fatalities are inevitable when developing such a technology.

Initially, Vasquez says, she was reassured by the polices public stance. Tempes then police chief, Sylvia Moir, told the San Francisco Chronicle, Its very clear it would have been difficult to avoid this collision in any kind of mode (autonomous or driven) based on how she came from the shadows right into the roadway. Uber, she said, would likely not be at fault, though she wouldnt rule out charges for the human pilot.

After that interview, Moir told me, emails that pulsed with excruciating rage deluged her inbox, accusing Moir of complicity in Tempes self-driving experiments and of blaming Herzberg for her own death. People were angry and wanted accountability. As the hours ticked by, reporters started digging up as many details as they could about Vasquezincluding information about an 18-year-old felony for which she had served just under four years in prison.

By the end of the day, a search warrant had been issued for any cell phone Vasquez had with her in the Volvo to determine if Rafaela was distracted. Maybe that would show what she was so interested in down by her knee. The warrant also listed the crime now under investigation: vehicular manslaughter.

Two nights after the crash, a trio of police gathered outside room 227 at a Motel 6 in Tucson. Vasquez had checked in because, she says, reporters were thronging her apartment. The first days had set her reeling. I knew everything happened; I just couldnt believe it was happening. I was in shock. Now as she greeted the cops, she seemed calm but slightly on edge; her attorney didnt want her answering any questions, she told them. They were there to bag her phones into evidence. She initially told the officers that shed only had her work phone with her in the car during the crash, but eventually handed over two LG phonesthe one she used for work, with a black case, she explained to them, and her personal one, in a metallic case.

The next morning, the data that police extracted showed no calls made or texts sent in the minutes before the accident. Then, according to police reports, the cops homed in on the apps. Were videos playing at the time of the crash? Search warrants went to Netflix, Hulu, and YouTube.

Maybe cell phone data would show what Vasquez was gazing at down by her knee.

The Tempe police were also weighing whether to make public the Volvos dashcam footage of the moments leading up to the crash. The Maricopa County attorney, Bill Montgomery, told them that releasing the video, which was in police custody at that point, could jeopardize their suspects right to fair legal proceedings. But Moir says the police were under considerable pressure from the public to do so, and they wanted to show there was nothing to hide; so the police tweeted the footage. Suddenly the world could see both Vasquez and Herzberg in the seconds before impact. Joe Guy, one operator in Tempe, gathered with others whod come into Ghost Town, and they watched the video of Vasquez. Most of us, he says, we went, What the fuck was she looking at?

As the investigation ramped up, half a dozen Advanced Technologies Group personnel from other offices arrived in Tempe. At the police garage, cops stood by while the company downloaded the impounded cars data so it could analyze what the system had done that night.

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Im the Operator: The Aftermath of a Self-Driving Tragedy - WIRED

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Las Vegas Casinos Get Some Potentially Bad News – TheStreet

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Vegas is back baby!

Whether its the prospect of major sports leagues making the oasis in the desert their home or new hotels and convention centers coming online in the coming years, Las Vegas is having a post-pandemic moment in the sun.

The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority is projecting the spending of $4.512 billion in 29 new projects that are expected to add 7,602 hotel rooms and 791,000 square feet of convention space in Southern Nevada by the end of 2024.

Vegas will have more than 158,000 hotel rooms by the close of 2024.

The LVCVA expects the city to add 766 additional rooms this spring with the reopening of the Palms resort and casino under the management of new owners, the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians.

Major League Baseball has been flirting with the city in an attempt to squeeze a new stadium deal out of the Oakland Athletics. The A's have been in active negotiations with multiple sites on or adjacent to The Las Vegas Strip.

And now there is a report that the NBA could be interested in granting the city an expansion team in the near future.

The Strip is seeing recovery with stalwarts like Wynn Resorts (WYNN) - Get Wynn Resorts, Limited Report, MGM (MGM) - Get MGM Resorts International Reportand Caesars (CZR) - Get Caesars Entertainment Inc Reportall expecting to decrease losses from the previous year. MGM is expected to turn a profit this fiscal year.

But there are macroeconomic storm clouds gathering on the horizon in the desert.

Russia's military invasion of Ukraine might have economic and geopolitical fallout for decades to come.

In the short-term, rising energy prices are the main concern for a U.S. economy that is only now just emerging from the Covid-19 pandemic depression.

Las Vegas stands to lose immensely if rising fuel prices force Americans to change their travel habits and plans, according to Stephen M. Miller, director of research at UNLV's Center for Business and Economic Research.

In an interview with Casino.org, Miller stated that Las Vegas' recovery is in a precarious position.

The number of drive-in visitors should fall almost immediately, and continue at a lower level until some relief occurs with additional crude oil supply. This will be a setback for the recovery in Southern Nevada," Miller said.

But sometimes people forget jet fuel is also derived from oil. So higher oil prices are making it more expensive for people to reach Vegas, however they travel."

Las Vegas' employment situation has slowly been getting back to normal since the darkest days of the pandemic. The town lost 172,000 jobs in leisure and hospitality between February 2020 and May 2020, according to Miller. The city has recovered 110,000 (64%) of those jobs.

But rising gas prices could hamper even that recovery as employees may have a more costly time traveling to work, Miller said.

Gas prices were rising before Russia invaded Ukraine as OPEC and other oil producers like the U.S. cut supply.

But now the war has exacerbated those supply issues with Russian oil now being shunned by many Western European countries who have begun concocting legislation that will make them less dependent on Russian oil.

However, Russia produces about 7 million barrels of oil a day, and no matter how much the West wants to exclude Russia, there is currently no way to replace that much production, according to some experts.

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Las Vegas woman says all of her work vehicles were targeted by gas thieves – KLAS – 8 News Now

Posted: at 12:06 pm

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) As gas prices continue to soar across the nation, many are taking desperate measures by stealing gas from cars.

Stacy Houston woke up to all give of her work cars showing they were on empty.

We came in to go so when one didnt work, we jumped in the other and the other and started checking all the gages and were like oh my God all of our gas, Houston said.

She realized this week she was the latest target for gas thieves. They opened her gas tank door and siphoned out her diesel fuel from her pick-up truck.

At the time, she had her work cars parked in front of their office on Flamingo Road where there were no surveillancecameras.

They are huge, one of them is a 14-foot box truck that is like $200 worth of gas, Houston said.

She is the owner of BIO-Clean Team, her livelihood depends on responding to clean-up calls any time of the day or night for homicides or suicides.

I understand people are hurting but we are all in the same position we are all paying for the same gas, unfortunately, some of us are running emergency vehicles and we need fuel, she said.

Houston says she has now decided to move her vehicles closer to her home where she can monitor them more closely.

Victor Botnari is the owner of Universal Motorcars, and tells 8 News Now he has gotten a few calls for people who have had damage done to their gas tanks because of gas thieves.

TONIGHT: Gas thieves are making their way around the valley. Stacy Houston woke up to all of her work vehicles emptied out. We also spoke with owner of Universal Motorcars who says he has gotten a few calls regarding this issue. @8NewsNow #8NN pic.twitter.com/Ncv5lQfilY

This could be two or three thousand dollars easy in some of the cars, Botnari said.He had a replacement gas tank at his shop for a customer who had a gas thief drill a hole into their gas tank.

He said bigger cars are easier targets because of the straight fuel pipe.

There are some tips you can take so you arent the next target for gas thieves, such as parking in a garage or buying a gas cap lock.

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Las Vegas woman says all of her work vehicles were targeted by gas thieves - KLAS - 8 News Now

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13 Things to do in Las Vegas this week: March 11-17 – KTNV 13 Action News Las Vegas

Posted: at 12:06 pm

(KTNV) Looking for something to do in Las Vegas? Look no further. Below are 13 Things happening in town this week (scroll down for some St. Patrick's Day specials):

1. Women's history walking tours at the Neon Museum It's lights up on Women's History Month at the Neon Museum. Learn about local ladies who had a hand in Las Vegas history and other fascinating females on nightly walking tour at the Neon Museum. While you're there, check out the new mural, "Las Vegas Luminaries," on the north wall.

2. Vinny Guadagnino returns as Chippendales guest performerGuess who's back on stage with the Chippendales? The third time is the charm for the Keto Guido as he returns to Las Vegas to join the cast as the legendary male revue celebrates 20 years at the Rio. Guadagnino's six-week engagement will run from March 11 through April 10.

3. Smokey Robinson at The VenetianLegendary singer-songwriter and MoTown Records co-founder Smokey Robinson will perform at The Venetian Theatre for two nights only this weekend.

4. Immersive yoga at Area15Build strength, create awareness and bring your mind and body connection to a new level with an immersive yoga class in The Portal at Area15. Dray Gardner leads a yoga class like no other, surrounded by state-of-the-art sound and 360-degree projections that will envelope you as you continue your practice.

5. Gimme Gimme Disco: A Dance Party Inspired by ABBA at Brooklyn Bowl Las Vegas Disco attire is encouraged at a dance party featuring all your favorite ABBA hits, plus plenty of other disco hits from the 70s and 80s. Take a chance and you'll be dancing all night long!

6. Las Vegas Sinfionetta benefit concert in support of Ukraine Fundraising proceeds from this performance at the Clark County Library Theater will go to support the people of Ukraine. The program will feature works by Mozart and Ukrainian composer Maxim Berezovsky. The Sinfionetta's artistic director, Taras Krysa, is Ukrainian.

7. Brad Paisley, two nights only at Encore Performing his greatest hits and top singles, Brad Paisley is bringing his talents to Las Vegas for two performances. In tandem with his scheduled performances at Encore at Wynn Las Vegas, the Eastside Lounge will celebrate the singer by showcasing a specialty cocktail: the Southern Comfort Zone, featuring Woodland Reserve Bourbon, southern spiced infusion, and a Luxardo cherry.

8. Murder mystery dinner at Lawry's The Prime Rib Can you solve the case before dessert? On Thursday, March 17, Lawry's The Prime Rib will host a special murder mystery dinner event in celebration of its 25th anniversary. Guests will be taken on a journey of murder and mayhem throughout their three-course meal.

ST. PATRICK'S DAY EVENTS

9. St. Patrick's Day menu at R R Irish PubR R Irish Pub, inside the Shoppes at Mandalay Place, will open from 8 a.m. to midnight on St. Patrick's Day so you can spend the whole day celebrating. The menu, featuring Irish classics, features deviled Scottish eggs, corned beef wontons, potato cakes, a Publican reuben, Dubliner burger, beef and Guinness stew, and fish and chips. Guests will be served on a first-come, first-served basis.

10. St. Pat's Block Party at Hennessy's Tavern Hennessy's Tavern has a five-day celebration of St. Patrick's Day on the books, promising "green beer & shenanigans." Live music performances are scheduled Wednesday, March 16 through Sunday, March 20, including the Las Vegas Bag Pipes on St. Patrick's Day at 11 a.m. Other performers include Little Tony, Hot-Sauce, Sin City Devils, Roxy Gunn Project and Sumptin Else.

11. Annual St. Patrick's Day Shamrock Bash at Fremont Street ExperienceFremont Street Experience will celebrate St. Patrick's Day in "true Irish style" with five days of events including 187 hours of free, live entertainment. Authentic Irish bands The Arcana Kings, Celtic Rockers, Whiskey Galore and Finnegan's Wake will perform. Additional entertainment will include the Firefighters Parade & Challenge, Celtic dancers and more.

12. St. Patrick's Day at Hofbruhaus Las VegasEnjoy the best of both world's this St. Patrick's day: the luck of the Irish and the beer of the Germans. The beer hall and garden at Hofbruhaus Las Vegas will offer a menu of Irish-German fusion offerings, including Spinatsuppe mit Brotwrfelchen, Gebackener Tortenbrie, Gepkelte Ochsenbrust mit Weikraut, and Brotpudding. A featured cocktail, the Screwy Leprechaun, is also on offer, combining Malibu Rum, blue Curaao and orange juice served in a 15-ounce Hurricane glass.

13. St. Patrick's Day Garden Party at Eight Lounge The 2,200-square-foot terrace at Eight Lounge will be the center of attention for its Irish Whiskey Garden Party sponsored by Teeling Whiskey. The celebration will include featured cocktails and selections from a rotating whiskey cart. Deals include $8 spirits and handcrafted Irish coffee cocktails infused with Teeling Whiskey and Guinness. There will be live music from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.

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Robin Lehner Returning to Las Vegas For Testing Regarding Lower-Body Injury – Knights On Ice

Posted: at 12:06 pm

Robin Lehner has left the Vegas Golden Knights on their road trip and is returning home to undergo testing for a lower-body injury.

Lehner has started the last few games for the Golden Knights including a loss vs. the Philadelphia Flyers on March 8, a win vs. the Ottawa Senators on March 6, a loss vs. the Boston Bruins on March 3, and another win vs. the San Jose Sharks on March 1.

Hes been in and out of the lineup this year, and was first sidelined on December 21. He ultimately missed five games with a lower-body injury before being sidelined again on February 15 with an upper-body injury. He once again missed five games of play, returned to the lineup, and is once again in a position where he can miss some time.

This season Lehners played in 38 games, and has saved 0.28 goals above average, and 11.02 goals above expected according to Evolving-Hockey. Laurent Brossoit, his backup, has posted marks of -4.68, and 1.2 in each respective category. Logan Thompson has been called upon for two games this year, and in that small sample has saved 1.41 goals above average, and 0.63 goals above expected.

The Golden Knights currently sit in third place in the division with a record of 32-22-4 and 68 points, and trail the second place Los Angeles Kings by three points. Vegas is up on the Edmonton Oilers by two points, with Edmonton currently trying to bump Vegas back into a Wild Card spot currently being headlined by the Nashville Predators and Dallas Stars.

When completely healthy upfront, it is fair to say this Golden Knights team would be able to hold on for a bit without Lehner. But this team isnt healthy, and while adding Jack Eichel has been a big boost, the absence of Mark Stone is felt tremendously.

This is what we know for now, and we will update you when we learn more. Tonight the Golden Knights are in Buffalo to take on the Sabres, and it will be a very important game for a returning Jack Eichel.

For more on that storyline, you can read his breakdown by Knights on Ices own Jillian Wagner.

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How gas prices have changed in Las Vegas in the last week – KPVI News 6

Posted: at 12:06 pm

National average gas prices continue to climb as the global oil market responds to Russias war against Ukraine.

Stacker compiled statistics on gas prices in Las Vegas (NV only) metro area using data from AAA. Gas prices are as of March 10.

The average price per gallon rose 8 cents on Wednesday, March 9, to a new record of $4.25, according to AAA. Records are being set daily: Tuesdays $4.17 per-gallon average broke a longstanding record of $4.114 per gallon from 2008.

Sanctions levied by the U.S. and the European Union have hindered Russia's ability to sell crude oil, which is a major determinant of gas prices. While just 3% of America's crude oil consumption comes from Russia, global volatility is contributing to rising prices in markets around the world.

Las Vegas by the numbers

- Current price: $4.88

--- State average: $4.87

- Week change: +$0.76 (+18.5%)

- Year change: +$1.74 (+55.2%)

- Historical expensive gas price: $4.88 (3/10/22)

Metros with the most expensive gas

#1. San Rafael, CA: $5.91

#2. San Luis Obispo-Atascadero-Paso Robles, CA: $5.88

#3. San Francisco, CA: $5.83

Metros with the least expensive gas

#1. St. Joseph, MO: $3.72

#2. Joplin, MO: $3.73

#3. Amarillo, TX: $3.74

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How gas prices have changed in Las Vegas in the last week - KPVI News 6

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LETTER: Writer is correct about difficulty of getting water to Las Vegas from the Northwest – Las Vegas Review-Journal

Posted: at 12:06 pm

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LETTER: Writer is correct about difficulty of getting water to Las Vegas from the Northwest - Las Vegas Review-Journal

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Spring temps warming faster in Reno than anywhere else in the nation; Las Vegas in second – Reno Gazette Journal

Posted: at 12:06 pm

Spring temperatures in Reno are increasing faster than anywhere else in the nation, according to a study looking at more than five decades of climate data.

Over the past 52 years, the average spring temperature in the city has increased by 6.8 degrees Fahrenheit, according to Climate Central, a nonprofit organization that analyzes and reports on climate science. The organizations report looked at national trends in average spring temperatures above normal since 1970.

The city with the second-most-dramatic increase in average spring temperatures was also in Nevada. Las Vegas has seen its average spring temperature jump 6.2 degrees Fahrenheit over the same period.

The Climate Central study analyzed historical data from 242 locations across the country for the months of March, April and May.

Scientists measure spring a little differently than the average person this year, on most peoples calendars, spring starts March 20 in the Northern Hemisphere. This coincides with the spring equinox and is referred to as astronomical spring.

Scientists, however, have split the calendar year into four chunks, each three months long, to standardize measurements. For scientific purposes, meteorological spring runs from March 1 to the end of May.

Of the 242 locations studied, 97% showed an increase in average spring temperatures, with about half seeing average temperature increases of 2 degrees Fahrenheit or more.

According to the study, Reno now averages 36 more days annually above previous normal temperatures while Las Vegas averages 30 more days.

The spring season is not only warming, but also arriving earlier. This leads to events such as longer mosquito and allergy seasons. It can also lengthen the growing season, impacting agricultural producers.

According to the USA National Phenology Network, spring leaf out (when plants transition from budding to leafing) is up to a month early in many locations across Western states.

Amy Alonzo covers the outdoors, recreation and environment for Nevada and Lake Tahoe.Reach her at aalonzo@gannett.com.Here's how you can support ongoing coverage and local journalism.

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Spring temps warming faster in Reno than anywhere else in the nation; Las Vegas in second - Reno Gazette Journal

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