According to the
European police agency Europol, more than 10,000 children who entered Europe
during the last two years have disappeared, vanishing through the gaping cracks
in Europe’s chaotic system for dealing with refugees and migrants.
The fear is that many
of the missing children have been trafficked into the sex trade by the same
organized criminal groups that are profiting handsomely by ferrying refugees
into and across Europe.
In addition, many
children are believed to have fled detention centers, where they do not feel
safe and are too often kept in the dark about their rights. Some are teenage
boys, many from Syria and Afghanistan, who have been sent ahead by families
hoping to join them later. Once on the streets, they are easy prey for drug dealers,
pimps or petty theft rings. Younger children and adolescent girls are also at
great risk of sexual and other abuse.
Some children may have
become separated from their families along the routes refugees take through
Europe after landing in Greece or Italy. Others arrive in Europe as
unaccompanied minors — 26,000 last year — according to the humanitarian group
Save the Children.
And more are arriving
every day. The United Nations says that more than a third of refugees crossing
the Mediterranean by boat to reach Europe are now children. Last year, more
than 70 percent of refugees who arrived in Europe were men.
“The implications of
this surge in the proportion of children and women on the move are enormous —
it means more are at risk at sea, especially now in the winter, and more need
protection on land,” warned Marie-Pierre Poirier, Unicef’s special coordinator
for the refugee and migrant crisis in Europe.
Britain’s Department of
International Development is setting up a 10 million pound ($14 million) fund
to support refugee and migrant children on the Continent. That is helpful, but
Britain, which has so far balked at taking any refugees already in Europe,
should also take in a fair share of unaccompanied children — as should all
other European countries.
The European Union also
needs to increase funding to improve services for these children. The
trafficking networks must be broken, and any perpetrators of crimes against
children must be apprehended and punished.
All European countries
have signed the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and have a
duty to provide for the safety and well-being of children on European soil.
That Europe has failed to protect these most vulnerable among the desperate
people arriving on the Continent is unconscionable.
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