1 in 6 of the World's Children Live in a Conflict Zone
In 2022, 468 million childrenÌýworldwide lived in areas affected by armed conflict.Ìý±·±ð²¹°ù±ô²â 200 million childrenÌýare living in the world's most lethal war zones,Ìýthe highest number in over a decade. Save the Children’s research shows thatÌýthe increase in children living conflict zones has been fuelled by the war in Ukraine.
Children living in war-affected countries live in constant fear, experiencing grave violations of their rights, with serious impacts on their mental health.ÌýMany children living in lethal war zones are already at risk of climate change and facing unprecedented levels of hunger as well.
Today, »ÆÉ«ÊÓƵisÌýthe world leader in protecting children from the physical and emotional wounds of war.Ìý We've helped more children in crisis recover and return to learning than any other global humanitarian organization.ÌýYour generous support makes this work possible.ÌýMake a one-time donation to or you care about - likeÌý- through your monthly donation.
The 10 most dangerous countries for children living in conflict
Save the Children's reportÌý"Stop the War on Children: The Forgotten Ones"Ìýstudied data from the 2022 report of the United Nations Secretary-General on children and armed conflict as well as the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) of children living in conflict zones to rankÌýthe 10 worst conflict-affected counties in which to be a child.
AÌýtotal of 2,985 children were killed across 24 countries in 2022. Data from Save the ChildrenÌýshows that the number of children reported killed inÌýGazaÌýin just three weeks has surpassed the annual number of children killed acrossÌýthe world's conflict zones since 2019.
9. sudan
10. central african republic
- Killing and injuring of children
- Recruitment and use of childrenÌýby armed forces or armed groups
- Abduction of children
- Attacks on schools or hospitals
- Refusal or lack of humanitarian support, like access to basic health care
- Rape and other forms of sexual violence
What Is the Impact of Conflict on Children?
Today, the nature of conflict – and its impact on children – is evolving. The world is witnessing deliberate campaigns of violence against civilians, including the targeting of schools, the abduction and enslavement of girls, and deliberate starvation.ÌýÌý
In today’s armed conflicts, there is often no longer a clearly demarcated battlefield: children’s homes and schools are the battlefield.
The nature of conflict has changed, putting children in the frontline in new and terrible ways. Wars are lasting longer. They are more likely to be fought in urban areas amongst civilian populations leading to deaths and life-changing injuries, and laying waste to the infrastructure needed to guarantee access to food and water. Attacks on schools and hospitals are up.Ìý
Children are disproportionately suffering the consequences of these brutal trends.
- We are seeing more children facing unimaginable mental and physical trauma.
- More children are going hungry.
- More children are falling victim to preventable diseases.
- More children are out of school.
- More children are at risk of sexual violence and recruitment by armed groups.
- More children are trapped on the frontline without access to humanitarian aid.
The Distinctive Ways Children are Harmed by Armed Conflict
Children suffer in conflict in different ways than adults, partly because they are physically weaker and also because they have so much at stake – their physical, mental and psychosocial development are heavily dependent on the conditions they experience as children.
Conflict affects children differently depending on a number of personal characteristics, significantly gender and age, but also disability status, ethnicity, religion and whether they live in rural or urban locations.Ìý
How »ÆÉ«ÊÓƵHelps Children in Conflict Zones
»ÆÉ«ÊÓƵbelievesÌýthat every child, no matter where they live, deserves to live a safe, happy and healthy life.ÌýWe lead the world in protecting children from the physical and emotional wounds of war and haveÌýhelped more children in crisis recover and return to learning than any other global humanitarian organization.
How many girls are living in conflict zones?
Conflict makes finding work harder, disrupts education, increases costs and poverty and weakes the protections that should be in place to keep children safe from violence. This in turn increases girls’ risk of child marriage because child marriage is sometimes seen as a way to reduce financial pressures on families or can be seen as a way to protect girls from other forms of gender-based violence
Around the world, 89.2 million adolescent girls currently live in conflict zones – that’s almost 1 in 5 adolescent girls (aged 10-17 years).
Globally, girls affected by conflict are more than 20% more likely to marry as children than those living outside of conflict zones.
Increased risk of child marriage linked to conflict was even higher for girls in East Asia and the Pacific, Latin America and the Caribbean and South Asia.