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[어린이/지진피해] 아이티 어린이 보호하기

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아이티 어린이 보호하기

[뉴잉글랜드저널오브메디신(NEJM)] 2010년 2월 17일자

아이티 대지진으로 23만명이 사망한 가운데, 어린이들은 대재앙에 직면에 있는 상황입니다.
이 article은 1월 24일 아이티로 긴급 파견된 하버드 대학의 François-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights팀이 9일 동안 아이티 정부 및 지방정부 관료 등 여론주도층, 인도주의 구호활동가, UN 기구와 비정부 기구의 대표 등을 인터뷰하고, 현지 진료소나 병원, 거주지, 고아원 등을 방문하여 조사한 결과를 NEJM에 발표한 내용입니다.

아이티 인구 9백만 중 어린이가 거의 50%에 육박한다고 합니다. 대지진이 발생하기 전에 고아원에서 살고 있던 어린이가 35만명으로 추정된다고 합니다. 부모가 있으나 가난이나 실업 등 경제적 이유 때문에 고아원에 맡겨진 어린이도 상당히 많다고 합니다.

아이티 정부에 등록된 고아원 수는 350군데 정도인데 미등록된 시설을 포함하면 거의 2배(700개) 정도가 될 것이라고 합니다.

아이티 대지진은 그렇잖아도 열악하기 짝이 없는 아이티의 어린이 건강과 인권을 더욱 악화시켰음은 더 이상 말할 나위가 없겠지요.



Protecting the Children of Haiti

Satchit Balsari, M.D., M.P.H., Jay Lemery, M.D., Timothy P. Williams, M.S.W., M.Sc., and Brett D. Nelson, M.D., M.P.H., D.T.M.&H.

Published at www.nejm.org February 17, 2010 (10.1056/NEJMp1001820)

출처 : http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/NEJMp1001820

Haiti has long had difficulty in protecting its children from harm. The earthquake that struck the country on January 12 destroyed much of the capital, Port-au-Prince, as it killed many government officials and United Nations (UN) workers and left as many as 230,000 people dead and many thousands injured. In the wake of this sweeping disaster, the plight of Haiti’s children has acquired new and terrible dimensions.


On January 24, we went to Haiti as members of a team sent by the François-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights at Harvard University to conduct a multisite rapid assessment of child-protection needs in the post-earthquake environment, where it was already evident that children were at grave risk of abandonment, abuse, and trafficking. The focus was on the current systems and practices for identifying and caring for unaccompanied children and for tracing those who had been separated from their families and reuniting them with parents or guardians. Longer-term interventions to promote the welfare, rights, and safety of this population were also examined.

In 9 days, we interviewed more than 25 stakeholders in Haiti, including government officials, local staff members, humanitarian aid workers, and representatives of domestic and international nongovernmental organizations and UN agencies. We visited field hospitals, clinics, shelters, and orphanages, along with observing risk-assessment practices and participating in meetings of UN “clusters” (groups focused on individual service sectors).

Children constitute almost half of Haiti’s population of 9 million. Before the earthquake, an estimated 350,000 children lived in “orphanages,” yet only 50,000 of them had no living parents.1 Desperately poor families have often felt compelled to place children in residential care facilities, only to return later and find that they have been given away for adoption. Throughout the world, many families have historically relinquished their children when they reached a tipping point due to unmanageable birth rates; parental death, disability, or unemployment; physical insecurity; displacement; or natural disasters.2 In pre-earthquake Haiti, many families had already reached such a crisis.

Local officials estimate that there are about 350 registered orphanages in the country and about twice as many unregistered and unregulated ones. Even most registered institutions do not meet international UN guidelines. A related long-standing threat to child protection has been the common practice of sending children away as restavèks (Creole for “stay with”) to live with others in exchange for work. An estimated 150,000 to 500,000 restavèks work essentially as unpaid domestic laborers, with little or no access to education or recreation and subject to physical, mental, and sexual abuse.3 The restavèk situation and the practice of institutionalizing children reflect the extreme destitution of Haitian families. Thus, the earthquake occurred against a background of economic extremity driving family separation, aggressive trafficking networks, inadequate law enforcement, and a growing global demand for adoptive children.

Parents died and families were splintered as a result of the earthquake. In the rush to provide emergency care, injured adults and children were often scattered, taken to the nearest available health care facilities, and sometimes transferred, without records, to other centers. This situation prevailed for a month, during which time little, if any, demographic or registration information was collected at sites of care or settlement. Critical early opportunities to record, identify, and trace children and families were lost. The lack of data has impaired all aspects of child-protection efforts.

Irregular settlement adds further risk. By January 31, there were 1.1 million Haitians in need of shelter in Port-au-Prince and the surrounding communes, living in 591 documented improvised settlements — some of which, like the Petionville Club, hosted as many as 100,000 refugees.4 Children and young people in these dense settlements are easy targets for organized crime, violence, and sexual exploitation.

This disaster has imposed a massive socioeconomic burden on a country that was already struggling with poor governance and an impoverished population. Stripped of all assets by the earthquake, a growing number of families are parting with their children. Given Haiti’s unregulated borders, weak law-enforcement practices, and insufficient numbers of international monitors, traffickers face few deterrents. There is growing consternation among child-protection workers about the lack of financial and human resources for protecting Haiti’s vulnerable child population, which is estimated by some at 1 million.5











Figure 1
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A Young Boy Walks Alone on the Road after the Earthquake in Port-au-Prince.

Photo courtesy of Tim Williams.

 
The restavèk phenomenon and unregulated “orphanages” pose challenges to the placement of unaccompanied children. Although international standard practice is for orphans to be promptly returned to their relatives or communities, the restavèk option and severe poverty make community-based solutions problematic. Many aid workers feel compelled to consider institutional placement as a safer interim solution. But safe institutions are hard to come by. We encountered several hospitals where unaccompanied children whose treatment was complete were not being released for lack of a safe discharge plan (though in the first few weeks after the earthquake, many unaccompanied children had been discharged to the street). Representatives of orphanages visit camps and hospitals daily, and there is no effective mechanism for distinguishing safe residential care facilities from fronts for trafficking.

Adoption is sometimes seen as a viable alternative in the face of destitution. Experience from past disasters and conflicts, however, suggests that adoptions in the immediate wake of such crises carry a high risk of permanent removal of children who are not actually orphans — a practice that inevitably inflames latent nationalist sentiment in the affected region. The fields of child human rights and child psychology place great emphasis on maintaining the integrity of the family unit, where children have the best chance of being raised in a loving, intimate environment. There is great need now to provide care for thousands of children, including those with medical and other postoperative needs, and in some instances temporary protection status or adoption across borders might be acceptable. But a much better system for tracing children and protecting borders must first be implemented, to reduce the risk that children will be torn from their own families who, given the means, would nurture and care for them.

Improved family-tracing procedures, border control, effective scrutiny of international adoptions in line with the Hague Convention on Protection of Children and Cooperation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption, and more stringent oversight of orphanages are urgently needed to forestall further abuse. We believe that all aid workers, including voluntary health care professionals, should receive training in child-protection norms and be sensitized to the prevalence of child abandonment, abduction, and trafficking. Child-protection basics, including identification procedures and record keeping, reestablishment of educational opportunities, creation of child-friendly spaces (set up specifically for children in crises to address their physical and psychosocial needs in a stable, trustworthy environment), and health interventions, must be ramped up rapidly. Additional steps must be taken to strengthen local governmental and policing institutions charged with child protection, specifically the Ministry for Social Welfare and Research and the Brigade for the Protection of Minors.











Figure 2
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Personnel from Haiti Social Services and the United Nations Children’s Fund Visit with Displaced Orphans in One of the Many Tent Cities in Port-au-Prince.

Photo courtesy of Brett Nelson.

 
A sustained strategy must be developed to mitigate the distress and insecurity of affected children. The challenges of tracing and family reunification must be addressed through streamlined data-acquisition systems, heightened public awareness, and community-driven monitoring initiatives. Attention to child welfare and disability-related needs is essential, even as economic strategies are found to enable families and communities to achieve a reasonable standard of living. A common refrain heard among aid workers is that to ensure safe childhoods, families must be given a fair chance to be economically viable — which requires investments in health, education, vocational skills, sustainable livelihoods, microfinancing, and improved agricultural practices.

A senior aid worker spoke for many seasoned responders when he said, “We must be firmly committed to this notion of building back Haiti better. We must not accept the restavèk phenomenon as the inevitable. We must build a society free of restavèks. Children belong in their communities.” This goal will be difficult to achieve. Yet, as the UN’s special rapporteur recently remarked, “The human security of every child is of utmost importance to the sustainable development of a society based on human rights and [is] a precondition for sustainable peace.”3

An imaginative, bold solution is required. Recovery from an earthquake is always complex and slow, but Haiti’s children should not be made to wait and suffer. One million vulnerable children are a very large share of Haiti’s future and of ours.


Disclosure forms provided by the authors are available with the full text of this article at NEJM.org.


Source Information

From the François-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights, Harvard University (S.B., J.L., T.P.W., B.D.N .) and Harvard Medical School (B.D.N.) — both in Boston; and the Division of Emergency Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York (S.B., J.L.).

This article (10.1056/NEJMp1001820) was published on February 17, 2010, at NEJM.org.

References



  1. Lederer E. UNICEF warns against Haiti child smuggling. The Associated Press. February 9, 2010.
  2. Panter-Brick C, Smith MT, eds. Abandoned children. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 2000.
  3. Shahinian G. Report of the Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery, including its causes and consequences — addendum: mission to Haiti A/HRC/12/21/Add.1. New York: United Nations, September 4, 2009. (Accessed February 16, 2010, at http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/type,MISSION,,,4ac0c6b42,0.html.)
  4. International Organisation for Migration. Improving conditions for displaced in Haiti’s spontaneous settlements. Press briefing note, January 25, 2010. (Accessed February 17, 2010, at http://www.iom.int/jahia/Jahia/media/press-briefing-notes/pbnAM/cache/offonce?entryId=26872.)
  5. Sequera V, Fox B. 1 million children vulnerable. The Associated Press. January 27, 2010.

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