Consultancy Terms of Reference for CAAC programme Mapping and Harmonization Exercise of all Child Protection training programs in Sub-Saharan Africa.

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Source: Save The Children

Background

The protection of children in conflict – and with it the realisation of the promises made in the declarations, conventions and statutes of the 20th century – is one of the defining challenges of the 21st century. Despite the advancement of international and regional legal and policy frameworks, the plights of children in the situation of armed conflicts remains grave and completely unacceptable. Often their rights are violated with total impunity. New evidence presented by SC is damning1:

− 420 million children – nearly one-fifth of children worldwide – are living in a conflict zone; a rise of nearly 30 million children from 2016.
− The number of children living in conflict zones has doubled since the end of the Cold War.
− 142 million children are living in high-intensity conflict-zones; that is, in conflict zones with more than 1,000 battle-related deaths in a year.
− New analysis from SC shows that the numbers of ‘grave violations’ of children’s rights in conflict reported and verified by the United Nations have almost tripled since 2010.
− Hundreds of thousands of children are dying every year as a result of indirect effects of conflict – including malnutrition, disease and the breakdown of healthcare, water and sanitation services.
The nature of conflict has changed, putting children in the frontline in new and terrible ways. 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. Intra-state conflict is increasing, as are the numbers of armed actors involved. The world is witnessing deliberate campaigns of violence against civilians, including the targeting of schools and health facilities, the abduction and enslavement of girls, and deliberate starvation.
The denial of humanitarian aid is used as yet another weapon of war. The international rules and basic standards of conduct that exist to protect civilians in conflict are being flouted with impunity. Children are disproportionately suffering the consequences of these brutal trends; almost one fifth of children worldwide are now living in areas affected by armed conflict.2 We see more children facing unimaginable mental and physical trauma and toxic stress; more children going hungry; more children falling victim to preventable diseases; more children out of school; more children at risk of sexual violence and recruitment by armed groups; and more children trapped on the frontline without access to humanitarian aid.

Across Africa, 152 million children – one in four – are living in conflict-affected areas. This is an increase from 2016, when it was one in five children. According to SC’s analysis, six out of the ten worst countries for children in conflict are in Africa.3 Unfortunately, in most cases, the harm children experience in war, pervasive as they are; the opportunity for redress, to receive the necessary assistance and support, for reparation and justice remain slim or more often than not, almost non-existent.

Applications to be sent by Friday 30th April 2021 through esaro.procurement@savethechildren.org

Reference

ESARO Consultancy

Dates

Opening date: 12 April 2021

Closing date: 30 April 2021

MIL OSI

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