Global perspective Human stories

UN envoy welcomes new measure to stop violence against children

Special Representative on Violence against Children Marta Santos Pais.
UN Photo/Jean-Marc Ferré
Special Representative on Violence against Children Marta Santos Pais.

UN envoy welcomes new measure to stop violence against children

A United Nations envoy dealing with children’s rights today hailed the decision of Member States to adopt a new protocol aimed at protecting children from abuse and violence.

A United Nations envoy dealing with children’s rights today hailed the decision of Member States to adopt a new protocol aimed at protecting children from abuse and violence.

The new protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, adopted today by the General Assembly, will encourage State parties to develop national mechanisms enabling children whose rights have been violated to access a system through which their voices and complaints can be heard.

The protocol will enter into force three months after it acquires ratifications or accessions from 10 countries.

“I wholeheartedly welcome the historical adoption of this protocol which consolidates the international system of accountability for human rights and is of decisive relevance to children’s protection from violence,” said Marta Santos Pais, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Violence against Children.

“I am confident the adoption of the protocol will be followed by a swift process of ratification and its provisions will help bring to an end the invisibility and conspiracy of silence surrounding incidents of violence against children,” Ms. Pais added.

The new protocol is the third one to the Convention and joins the Optional Protocols on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography and on the involvement of Children in Armed Conflict – both of which entered into force in 2002.

Established in 1989, the Convention on the Rights of the Child is the first legally binding international instrument incorporating the full range of human rights – civil, cultural, economic, political and social – for people under the age of 18.