PACE recommends that protection of refugee children be strengthened

PACE recommends that protection of refugee children be strengthened

Ukrinform
The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe is proposing that the governments of member states undertake a number of measures to strengthen protection of refugee children separated from families.

That’s according to a resolution approved following joint debates on three reports: on humanitarian consequences and internal and external displacements due to Russia’s aggression toward Ukraine, on protection and care for unaccompanied refugee children, and on justice and security for women, an Ukrinform correspondent reports.

The Assembly is alarmed by the rapidly growing number of unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children in Europe. Member states are obliged to protect private and family life, especially of unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children who are particularly vulnerable and require higher protection, the resolution recalls.

The main reasons for the substantial number of children ending up in Europe alone, often without any identification, means of subsistence or support are poverty, armed conflicts, and the climate crisis. In recent years, most unaccompanied children came from Afghanistan, Syria, and Bangladesh.

At the same time, it is stressed that the ongoing Russian aggression against Ukraine has the drastic consequence of a massive displacement of migrant and refugee children, many of them unaccompanied and separated.

“As such, they are extremely vulnerable to exploitation and abuse, and fall easily prey to smugglers and traffickers. It is of utmost importance and urgency that the competent authorities of Council of Europe member States, including members of parliaments, are fully aware of the legal obligations stemming from international and European treaties related to the protection of unaccompanied and separated children, including alternative care, to ensure flawless protection of these children and to ensure their best interest in all aspects,” the resolution reads.

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The PACE underlines that all member states should adopt a common approach whereby unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children are, first and foremost, considered as children. This entails ensuring that their best interest is the primary consideration, irrespective of their migration status in the country concerned.

In this context, member states must ensure that unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children benefit from:

  • all due child protection safeguards, including adequate and immediate identification and registration of their identity and legal, family and social situation;
  • a robust and gender sensitive assessment of their immediate protection, support and care needs; particular attention should be paid to victims of violence, abuse and human trafficking as well as to children with special needs including medical and psychological needs;
  • the immediate appointment of a guardian, who will act to protect the child’s best interest and link the child to required services, while searching for the child’s parents and family members;
  • an exhaustive assessment and determination of their best interest by their guardians, child protection services or competent courts where necessary;
  • access to education; governments must provide for the integration of unaccompanied migrant minors in the field of education, ensure their learning process and facilitate their link with school and with other children of their age; and
  • child-sensitive age-assessment procedures, which should only be carried out if there are serious doubts about a person’s age, and which should always be carried out in the best interests of the child, and be subject to independent monitoring; the development of a single model of age assessment in Europe, based on the presumption that the person is a minor; systematic application of the margin of error in favour of the person concerned, so that the lowest age in the margin determined by the assessment is recorded as the person’s age; and access to effective remedies.

Furthermore, the Assembly underlines that member states are legally responsible for unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children within their territory in accordance with Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and, therefore, should offer solid child protection systems, which include strong co-ordination between the competent child protection and migration bodies as well as with other authorities and relevant civil society.

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The Assembly considers that the Council of Europe should facilitate the creation of a European platform for the exchange of knowledge, practical know-how and best practices between its member states in the successful implementation of alternative care for unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children.

The Assembly also invites member states to respond adequately to the needs of unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children by providing them with assistance that preserves family unity and keeps them with relatives or other caregivers. For this end, the member states should adopt alternative care solutions, as interim measures, until the time when children can be reunited with their family members.

Therefore, member states are invited to:

  • create safe, legal and accessible routes for children to reunite with their families in Europe, which spare them from long and dangerous traveling alone;
  • adopt a legislative framework, if not already in place, allowing the development of proactive targeted measures, which address specific needs of unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children;
  • ensure that family reunification requests of unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children are considered as a priority matter respecting the best interest of the child;
  • integrate asylum reception and migration systems in childcare and protection systems ensuring that unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children have access to the same protection and care as all other children; provide necessary funding and designate a public authority responsible for this integration;
  • conduct a timely assessment of specific needs of unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children aiming at providing the best care adapted to the case of each child;
  • take into account all specific aspects of the new environment of migrant and refugee children (language, different culture and living conditions) when proposing a care solution for the children;
  • ensure that the views of migrant and refugee children in need of alternative care are considered when identifying care arrangements that are in their best interest;
  • build public support for child-friendly policies in the field of migration, by raising awareness of the plight of unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children, making full use of the wealth of witness accounts and advocacy;
  • ensure that the public authority responsible for the State system of alternative care for unaccompanied and separated children guarantees different care options and employs a sufficient number of well-trained specialists in providing different types of care. It should also monitor different alternative care solutions on a regular basis; and
  • pay special attention to the recruitment of foster families, ensuring their intercultural awareness, pedagogical and nurturing experience, as well as capacity to create a space for a child. They should also have good awareness of the asylum process and be able to support a child at its different stages, including psychological support.

The Assembly reaffirms that when such family reintegration is not possible, member states should develop and implement a range of suitable quality alternative care that responds to the specific and individual needs of unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children.

Recalling the United Nations Guidelines for the Alternative Care of Children, the Assembly calls on member States to provide the following alternative care models, including kinship care, foster care, and emergency and transit shelters, in exceptional circumstances, ensuring that the principle of non-detention is safeguarded in any of these modalities.

Finally, member states shall also provide services, programmes and measures aimed at supporting unaccompanied and separated migrant and refugee children to transition out of care and continuing emotional and practical support aimed at strengthening their autonomy; this entails appropriate preparation and planning prior to leaving care, regardless of whether the young person is staying in or leaving the country.

The Assembly urges, as regards specifically the current emergency situation affecting Ukrainian children, that there is an ongoing need for member States to strengthen a coordinated approach at European level amongst countries of first arrival, transit countries and host countries to ensure that children are promptly identified, registered and do not go missing, that they benefit from all protection safeguards and that they are placed, when determined as necessary, in suitable quality alternative care arrangements.

Photo: CTK

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