Background
On 19 August 1982, at its emergency special session on the question of Palestine, the General Assembly, ¡°appalled at the great number of innocent Palestinian and Lebanese children victims of Israel¡¯s acts of aggression¡±, decided to commemorate 4 June of each year as the .
The purpose of the day is to acknowledge the pain suffered by children throughout the world who are the victims of physical, mental and emotional abuse. This day affirms the UN's commitment to protect the rights of children. Its work is guided by the , the most rapidly and widely ratified international human rights treaty in history.
The Gra?a Machel report and General Assembly Resolution 51/77
A groundbreaking study on the (A/51/306), prepared by Ms. Gra?a Machel, Expert of the Secretary-General appointed in 1994, concludes:
"We want a society where people are more important than things, where children are precious; a world where people can be more human, caring and gentle."
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The drew global attention to the devastating impact of armed conflict on children and in 1997 The General Assembly adopted on the Rights of the Child. It was a landmark development in efforts to improve the protection of children in conflict situations.
This signaled the start of a new consensus among Member States, on the need for dedicated attention, advocacy and coordinated effort, by the international community, to address the vulnerabilities and violations faced by children in conflict-related situations.
Resolution 51/77 built on existing General Assembly efforts to protect the rights of children, including through the and its , and the annual Rights of the Child resolutions. And it established the mandate of the .
Sustainable Development: securing a better future for children
More needs to be done to protect the millions of children living in countries and areas affected by conflict. More must be done to protect children from targeting by violent extremists, to promote international humanitarian and human rights law, and to ensure accountability for violations of the rights of children.
The provides us with the universal masterplan to secure a better future for children. The new agenda includes for the first time a specific target (16.2) to end all forms of violence against children, and ending the abuse, neglect and exploitation of children is mainstreamed across several other violence-related targets.
Millions of children are caught up in conflicts in which they are not merely bystanders, but targets."
Gra?a Machel, Expert of the Secretary-General
SDG Goal 16
Target 16.2 of SDG goal 16 (promoting just, peaceful and inclusive societies) demands :
"End abuse, exploitation, trafficking and all forms of violence against and torture of children"