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Children: Forgotten victims of war crimes

September 16, 2022

More than 452 million children worldwide live with the reality of war. Their injuries and deaths are rarely investigated, and crimes against them are seldom punished.

A child looks out from a broken window in Ukraine
Crimes against children in war are rarely punishedImage: Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP/Getty Images

Four-year-old Lisa was on her way to speech therapy with her mother when rockets hit the Ukrainian city of Vinnytsia in July. A video later spread online showing the empty stroller she was sitting in when the attack happened. Lisa and her teddy bear were on the ground next to it; she was dead. The Russian attack killed 23 people. Lisa was one of three children among the dead.

"The war in Ukraine is a tragic reminder that children are repeatedly the worst affected and often the forgotten victims of war," Aurelie Lamaziere, an advocacy officer for the aid group Save the Children, told DW.

Officially, 5,827 civilians have died in the war in Ukraine since late February, according to United Nations figures, including 375 children. Ukraine and its Western partners have vowed to hold Russia accountable for any crimes committed by its troops, but that is likely to be a long and difficult process with an uncertain outcome.

Legally speaking, children are often forgotten, Lamaziere said. War crimes against minors are rarely sufficiently documented, investigated and punished.

'Children are often a gray zone'

"Children are often a gray zone in the legal process," lawyer Natalie von Wistinghausen said during a recent discussion in Berlin sponsored by the Bertelsmann Foundation. "There are laws" to hear from children in court, she added, "they just have to be applied."

The principle of universal jurisdiction, for example, "provides for a state's jurisdiction over crimes against international law, even when the crimes did not occur on that state's territory, and neither the victim nor perpetrator is a national of that state," according to the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights. "The principle allows national courts in third countries to address international crimes occurring abroad, to hold perpetrators criminally liable, and to prevent impunity."

Save the Children organized an event to discuss crimes against children in BerlinImage: Volker Witting/DW

That means a German court could hold a trial for war crimes that occurred in Ukraine, involving non-Germans.

Germany's Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) has been collecting evidence of possible Russian war crimes in Ukraine. More than 300 pieces of evidence have been gathered so far, BKA President Holger Münch recently told the newspaper, Welt am Sonntag.

It's unclear if cases the BKA may be pursuing involve crimes against children. Save the Children's Lamaziere said she hopes young victims will get justice this time around.

The children in Ukraine are among the 452 million minors living in war in about 30 countries or territories, according to NGO estimates. That's double the number of children compared with 20 years ago. Of that, 27 million cannot go to school and an estimated 250,000 have been forced to fight or otherwise serve fighters, including as sex workers.

Germany 'champion' of legal accountability

In 2021, a German court made international headlines when it sentenced a former member of the so-called "Islamic State" (IS) to life in prison for the killing of Reda, a 5-year-old girl belonging to the Yazidi minority in Iraq. She and her mother were sold into slavery and regularly abused.

An Iraqi citizen and his 30-year-old German wife were also sentenced for their involvement. "Germany showed then that justice can prevail. The country is its champion," Lamaziere said.

The German government is pushing to strengthen the rights and protections of children, said Luise Amtsberg, the government's human rights commissioner. That includes providing better physical and psychological care following war traumas.

"To do that we need more money and closer cooperation with NGOs," she said.

The war in Ukraine could be a chance to improve things, Lamaziere said, because it has brought the issue to global attention.

"Ukraine could be a test case for war crimes against children," she said.

While you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing.

Volker Witting Volker Witting has been a political correspondent for DW-TV and online for more than 20 years.
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