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  • 24
    Nov
    2012
    6:58am, EST

    Kids removed from UK couple over support for 'independence' from Europe

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    LONDON -- Three children were removed from the care of an English couple because their support for the U.K. Independence Party meant they were unsuitable to provide foster care, an official said Saturday.

    Local government body Rotherham Council said that the three children were not “indigenous white British” and that social workers had raised concerns about the UKIP political party’s stance on immigration, ITV News reported.

    Joyce Thacker, the director for children and young people's services at Rotherham Council, told BBC News that the children were placed with the couple on an emergency basis and were not due to remain with them permanently. She confirmed they had been removed from the couple's care.

    “If the party [UKIP] mantra … is ending the active promotion of multiculturalism, I have to think about that,” she added. “I think they [UKIP] have very clear views on immigration.”

    She told the BBC that the decision had not been “easy” and she did not think UKIP was a “racist party.”

    'Ruled by this regime'
    UKIP campaigns for Britain to withdraw from the European Union, saying "we do not have to be ruled by this regime" in order to trade with European countries.

    On immigration, it says "the tide of mass EU immigration has pushed down wages and restricted job opportunities. Only by leaving the EU can we regain control of our borders." The party is calling for a permanent immigration freeze for 5 years and says immigrants "must be fluent in English, have minimum education levels and show they can financially support themselves."

    Read more UK and world stories from ITV News

    UKIP party leader Nigel Farage said in messages on Twitter that the authorities “clearly have no understanding of UKIP and by their actions, clearly no desire to know.”

    He said the council was “partially backtracking” by saying the couple would still be allowed “to adopt. But by the sounds of it, only white children. New Apardheid? [sic]” 

    Read more World stories from NBC News

    The British Education Secretary Michael Gove, a member of the center-right Conservative Party, also attacked the decision, ITV News reported.

    “Rotherham's reasons for denying this family the chance to foster are indefensible. The ideology behind their decision is actively harmful to children,” he said.

    “We should not allow considerations of ethnic or cultural background to prevent children being placed with loving and stable families. We need more parents to foster, and many more to adopt,” he added.

    The center-left Labour Party said in a message on Twitter that “Membership of UKIP shouldn't block parents from adopting children. There needs to be an urgent investigation by Rotherham Council into this.”

    ITV News is an NBC News partner.

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    116 comments

    Good lord, what a bunch of left-wing drones on these messageboards. So if I happen to believe that "immigrants must be fluent in English, have minimum education levels and show they can financially support themselves" and want to pull the US out of NAFTA, I shouldn't be allowed to be a foster parent …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: europe, children, parents, foster, independence, featured, ukip
  • 17
    Nov
    2012
    3:58am, EST

    Dozens of children killed after train crashes into school bus in Egypt

    Egypt's president is promising an investigation into a horrific train collision with a school bus in which 49 children were killed. NBC's Mara Schiavocampo reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 10 a.m. ET: CAIRO -- At least 49 people, the vast majority children, were killed when a train crashed into a school bus in a city south of Cairo Saturday, Egyptian police and the governor of the city told NBC News.

    Gov. Yahya Taha Kishk said 17 people were injured in the accident in Assiut, which is around 190 miles south of the capital.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Manfalut hospital, near the crash site, told NBC News that the children killed in the crash were aged around four to six years old and attended a private nursery school.

    A doctor at the hospital told Reuters that two women were among those injured.

    "They told us the barriers were open when the bus crossed the tracks and the train collided with it," doctor Mohamed Samir added, citing witness accounts.


    The bus was broken in half by the force of the crash, pictures on youm7.com website, run by an Egyptian newspaper, showed. Blood was spattered on the front of the engine and school bags and text books, some bloodstained, were scattered around the scene.  

    Officials said the level of destruction and mutilation made it difficult to count and identify the bodies. 

    "I saw the train collide with the bus and push it about 1 km (half a mile) along the track," said Ahmed Youssef, a driver. 

    Railway crossing worker asleep
    President Mohammed Morsi ordered his ministers to offer support to the families of those killed, Egypt's official news agency reported.

    Kishk, the Assiut governor, ordered an investigation and told state television that the railways crossing was open when the train hit the bus.

    "The crossing worker was asleep. He has been detained," he said.

    Victims' families protested at the scene, the state news agency reported.

    Egypt's roads and railways have a poor safety record. Egyptians have complained successive governments have failed to enforce basic safety standards, leading to a string of deadly accidents.

    Earlier this month, at least three Egyptians were killed and more than 30 injured in a train crash in Fayoum, another city south of Cairo. In July, 15 people were injured in Giza, close to the capital, when a train derailed. 

    Egypt's worst train disaster was in 2002 when a fire ripped through seven carriages of an overcrowded passenger train, killing at least 360 people.

    Many more have been killed in rail accidents since then despite pledges from successive government to improve safety. Accidents involving multiple deaths are also common on Egypt's poor road network.

    NBC News' Charlene Gubash and Reuters contributed to this report.

    Reuters

    Relatives of victims look at the wreckage of a bus after a train crashed into it in Assuit, Egypt, on Saturday.

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    75 comments

    My sincere condolences to the parents and families of these children. A real tragedy, indeed.

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    Explore related topics: egypt, middle-east, accident, crash, children, bus, train, featured
  • 31
    Oct
    2012
    11:27am, EDT

    Chinese government think tank urges end to unpopular one-child policy

    Andy Wong / AP

    Chinese families bring their babies to the Ritan Park in Beijing Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2012. A government think tank says China should start phasing out its one-child policy immediately and allow two children for every family by 2015. It remains unclear whether Chinese leaders are ready to take that step.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    BEIJING -- A Chinese government think tank is urging the country's leaders to start phasing out its unpopular one-child policy immediately and allow two children for every family in the country by 2015.

    Some demographers saw the timeline put forward by the China Development Research Foundation, which is close to the central leadership, as a bold move. Others warned that the gradual approach, if implemented, would be insufficient to help correct the problems that China's strict birth limits have created.

    Xie Meng, a press officer with the foundation, said the final version of its report would be released "in a week or two," but Chinese state media were given advance copies.

    The official Xinhua News Agency said the foundation was recommending a two-child policy in some provinces from this year and a nationwide two-child policy by 2015. It also proposed all birth limits be dropped by 2020.

    "China has paid a huge political and social cost for the policy, as it has resulted in social conflict, high administrative costs and led indirectly to a long-term gender imbalance at birth," Xinhua said, citing the report.

    The foundation's press officer told NBC News that the report was "the result of two years of effort." 

    "China's demographic changes were analyzed in connection with seven areas," she said, citing the challenges of aging, unemployment, child and women's welfare, urbanization, education, health and family planning.

    But it remains unclear whether Chinese leaders are ready to take up the recommendations. China's National Population and Family Planning Commission had no immediate comment on the report Wednesday.

    'Change is inevitable'
    While they are known to many as the one-child policy, the actual rules are more complicated. The government limits most urban couples to one child, and allows two children for rural families if their first-born is a girl. There are numerous other exceptions as well, including looser rules for minority families and a two-child limit for parents who are themselves both singletons.

    Cai Yong, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, said the report carries extra weight because the think tank is under the State Council, China's Cabinet. He said he found it remarkable that state-backed demographers were willing to publicly propose such a detailed schedule and plan on how to get rid of China's birth limits.

    Gruesome photos put spotlight on China's one-child policy

    "That tells us at least that policy change is inevitable, it's coming," said Cai, who was not involved in the drafting of the report, but knows many of the experts who were. Cai is currently a visiting scholar at Fudan University in Shanghai. "It's coming, but we cannot predict when exactly it will come."


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Adding to the uncertainty is a once-in-a-decade leadership transition that kicks off Nov. 8 that will see a new slate of top leaders installed by next spring.

    Cai said the transition could keep population reform on the back burner or changes might be rushed through to help burnish the reputations of President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao on their way out.

    There has been growing speculation among Chinese media, experts and ordinary people about whether the government will relax the one-child policy — introduced in 1980 as a temporary measure to curb surging population growth — and allow more people to have two children.

    Though the government credits the policy with preventing hundreds of millions of births and helping lift countless families out of poverty, it is reviled by many ordinary people. The strict limits have led to forced abortions and sterilizations, even though such measures are illegal. Couples who flout the rules face hefty fines, seizure of their property and loss of their jobs.

    Read more international stories on NBCNews.com

    Many demographers argue that the policy has worsened the country's aging crisis by limiting the size of the young labor pool that must support the large baby boom generation as it retires. They also say it has contributed to the imbalanced sex ratio as some families abort baby girls, preferring to try for a male heir.

    The government has recognized those problems and has tried to address them by boosting social services for the elderly. It has also banned sex-selective abortion and rewarded rural families whose only child is a girl.

    Outdated or engine of growth?
    Many today also see the birth limits as outdated, a relic of the era when housing, jobs and food were provided by the state.

    "It has been 30 years since our planned economy was liberalized," commented Wang Yi, the owner of a shop that sells textiles online, under a news report about the foundation's proposal. "So why do we still have to plan our population?"

    Ren Hao, a Chinese journalist who recently married, told NBC that he welcomed the proposed policy change but suggested that it be accompanied by new measures in education, health care and economy in order to succeed.

    Read more China coverage on NBC's Behind The Wall

    "Raising a child is quite a burden nowadays so, in the end, it's up to the couples to decide whether they want to have one child or more based on their conditions," he said.

    Ji Jianming, a Beijing construction project manager, argued in favor of the policy. "The one-child policy was good," he said. "It allowed China to develop rapidly and improve people's lives faster."

    Though open debate about the policy has flourished in state media and on the Internet, leaders have so far expressed a desire to maintain the status quo.

    President Hu said last year that China would keep its strict family planning policy to keep the birth rate low and other officials have said that no changes are expected until at least 2015.

    Wang Feng, director of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center for Public Policy and an expert on China's demographics, contributed research material to the foundation's report, but has yet to see the full text. He said he welcomed the gist of the document that he's seen in state media.

    It says the government "should return the rights of reproduction to the people," he said. "That's very bold."

    But Gu Baochang, a professor of demography at Beijing's Renmin University and a vocal advocate of reform, said the proposed timeline wasn't aggressive enough.

    "They should have reformed this policy ages ago," he said. "It just keeps getting held up, delayed."

    NBC News' Eric Baculinao and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    113 comments

    Well, they will need more workers in the future, esp. if Romney is elected and he and his billionaire "job creator" friends start sending all of the USA work over to China!! So screw China - do not vote for Romney!!

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    Explore related topics: china, asia, children, birth-control, featured, one-child-policy, behind-the-wall
  • 30
    Oct
    2012
    2:50pm, EDT

    1.6 million Egyptian children work, activists worry number will grow

    Khalil Hamra / AP

    An Egyptian child stands in front of a tire repair shop where he works in Cairo, Egypt. Photo taken on Oct. 2.

    Khalil Hamra / AP

    An Egyptian girl fills water containers at a pottery workshop in old Cairo. Photo taken on Oct. 18.

    The Egyptian government estimates that 1.6 million minors work - almost 10 percent of the population aged 17 or under. Other experts put the number at nearly twice that.

    Some child labor activists worry that protections for children could be loosened further under the new constitution still being written. Earlier this month, the Egyptian Coalition for Children's Rights warned that early drafts of the document did not include as firm prohibitions on child labor as past constitutions.

    • In workshops, fields, Egyptian children at work
    • Follow @NBCNewsPictures on Twitter

    Khalil Hamra / AP

    An Egyptian child helps his father to load a donkey cart with hay in a farm at the outskirts of Qalyobiya, 27 miles north of Cairo, Egypt. Photo captured on Oct. 17.

    Khalil Hamra / AP

    An Egyptian child loads a cart with cement bricks in a brick factory at the outskirts of Qalyobiya, 27 miles north of Cairo.

    Khalil Hamra / AP

    An Egyptian child carries a clay roof tile in a pottery workshop in old Cairo. Photo captured on Oct. 18.

    Khalil Hamra / AP

    An Egyptian child takes a tea break during his work at a mechanics workshop in Cairo, Egypt. Photo captured Oct. 4.

    4 comments

    1.6 million Egyptian children work A lot of Democrats could learn a thing or two from these kids.

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    Explore related topics: business, egypt, children, work, child-labor, society, working, world-news
  • 12
    Oct
    2012
    9:09am, EDT

    UK in turmoil after multiple claims kids' entertainer molested children for years

    Hulton Archive via Getty Images

    English disc jockey, television broadcaster and charity worker Jimmy Savile on April 17, 1974, with some of the children who were going to take part in his show 'Jim'll Fix It' on BBC television.

    By Chris Hampson, NBC News Director of International News

    LONDON - Sit down children and let me tell you a story. Once upon a time there was an eccentric disc-jockey and TV presenter with long golden hair who became a favorite with families all around the United Kingdom.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    For years he presented a massively popular kids’ TV show where this kind and gentle man helped children achieve the stuff of their dreams. It was called “Jim’ll Fix It.” It had a catchy theme tune I can still whistle.

    He smoked big cigars, wore outlandish suits, ran marathons and raised millions for charity. In recognition of his good work, he was knighted by the queen. Arise Sir Jimmy Savile.

    When he died, doctors and nurses lined the streets near their hospital to pay homage to this larger-than-life philanthropist as his cortege drove through his home town.

    The fairy tale was over.

    But now it has emerged it was a nightmare all along.

    For it turns out that Uncle Jim was very likely a sexual pervert -- a man who systematically sought out young girls and abused them over decades, all while hiding under the guise of being one of the biggest and nicest celebrities in the country.

    Samir Hussein / WireImage via Getty Images, file

    Sir Jimmy Savile attends the ceremony to name Cunard's new cruise-liner Queen Elizabeth II in Southampton Docks Oct. 11, 2010 in Southampton, England.

    To get the enormity of this, imagine Captain Kangaroo standing accused today of being a sexual predator.

    'Everyone' knew
    The revelations burst into the public consciousness last week, and every day since the headlines have revealed claims of more and more lurid behavior -- much of it taking place under the noses of the authorities, including the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), the country's highly respected public broadcaster.

    It’s alleged that for years Savile took underage girls into his dressing room at the BBC -- and that “everyone” knew what was going on. No-one did anything.

    ITV News: TV star says 'Savile's hands were everywhere, just lingering'

    Savile’s supposed good works included working as a porter and fundraiser in major medical facilities. Now, he’s said even to have abused children as they lay in their hospital beds. 

    I bumped into him myself when I went to the hospital with my kids.  He was charming, and they were thrilled to see him. There was not a hint of anything to cause me – a protective dad – any concern.  Quite the opposite. It was easy to be star-struck by his apparent warmth.

    Across Britain, 11 police forces are now investigating up to 40 allegations of abuse by victims who were as young as 13. There are calls to strip him of his knighthood.

    Too late. Savile died last year at the age of 84.  A showman to the end, he was buried in a gold coffin and laid to rest at an angle of 45 degrees so he could have a view out to sea.

    Phil Noble / Reuters

    Floral tributes and a piece of turf mark the spot where the headstone was removed from Jimmy Savile's grave.

    His gravestone -- actually three of them side-by-side -- was, like Savile, flamboyant and larger than life.  He penned his own epitaph, written in gold leaf on the polished granite stone: “It was good while it lasted.”

    Well, no it wasn’t, Sir Jimmy. It was awful, and it should have been stopped before you could hurt so many unsuspecting, trustful youngsters.

    The investigations will go on. The BBC has promised to dig into his past -- and their own apparent failure over years to stop him. Prime Minister David Cameron has spoken of his concerns.

    This week Savile’s gravestone was dismantled in the early morning gloom “out of respect to public opinion, and to those who are buried there and to those who tend their graves.”

    It was broken into pieces and will be ground down and used as landfill. Dust to dust.

    His epitaph is gone with it. Instead of the fame he so craved and enjoyed, and in spite of the millions he raised for charity, he will be remembered as a monster who molested kids.

    So much for the fairy tale.

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    • Tunisian magazine teaches children how to build a Molotov cocktail
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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    44 comments

    I don't know much about this case, but I would be more impressed if the charges came out while he was still alive and able to defend himself. Always beware accusations made after the alleged perp dies.

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    Explore related topics: children, abuse, sex, england, featured, jimmy-savile
  • 10
    Oct
    2012
    1:03pm, EDT

    'Easy to make and use': Tunisian magazine teaches children how to build a Molotov cocktail

    Qawz Quzah

    "(A Molotov cocktail) is an improvised weapon that is often used in riots and acts of sabotage because it is easy to make and use,'' according to an article in Tunisian children's magazine Qawz Quzah.

    By Christina Marker, NBC News

    A how-to guide on putting together a Molotov cocktail is not something you would expect a children’s magazine to feature, but that is exactly what recently ran in "Qawz Quzah," a popular Tunisian magazine whose name means "rainbow" in Arabic and is aimed at children aged five to 15.  

    “(A Molotov cocktail) is an improvised weapon that is often used in riots and acts of sabotage because it is easy to make and use,'' reads the article, which came complete with detailed instructions on how to make a Molotov cocktail and appeared in the latest edition of Qawz Quzah.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The article, which appeared in a section of the publication called "Knowledge Corner," touched a raw nerve in a country still struggling to tame the unrest stirred up by last year's successful revolution, the first of the Arab Spring. The government on Monday announced that it would prosecute the popular magazine for running it. 

    Slideshow: State of emergency in Tunisia

    Tunisia's revolution led to the democratic election of a transitional government headed by the moderate Islamist Ennahda party, but violence persists among extreme religious groups. Molotov cocktails have been the weapon of choice in these confrontations.

    A 'professional mistake'
    Speaking from Tunis, Rabii Kalboussi, a journalist working for the English-language website Tunisia Live, told NBC News that the story has provoked a stronger reaction abroad than it has inside the country itself.

    Crackdown on free speech in birthplace of Arab Spring

    “No one knows why such an article was published. It is a kids' magazine, so I don't think there are political intentions behind it,” he said.


    “I don’t believe the government is really aware of the impact these things have on children, especially if they are regular readers of the magazine,” Kalbous added.

    On Tuesday, the magazine’s editor-in-chief Monji Chebbi was forced to apologize on Tunisian television for what he described as a “professional mistake.”

    The Ministry for Women and Family Affairs said the article “encourages violent and terrorist thought'' and it also endangers children's lives by “encouraging the use of Molotov cocktails in acts of vandalism or terrorism."

    Mohamed Bouazizi, the fruit vendor whose death changed the Arab world

    The Molotov cocktail was named after Vyacheslav Molotov, the Soviet foreign minister during the 1950s. It is a general term used to describe improvised incendiary devices.

    NBC’s Charlene Gubash and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    380 comments

    Another place where public education is sticking their noses where they don't belong. Building Molotov cocktails should be something the kids learn at home from their parents.

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    Explore related topics: children, tunisia, featured, molotov-cocktail, qawz-quzah
  • 25
    Sep
    2012
    2:53pm, EDT

    'Senseless acts of torture and violence': Charity appeals for help for Syria's children

    AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen

    A Syrian child stands next to rebel fighters checking a house that was damaged in bombing by government forces in Marea, on the outskirts of Aleppo, Syria, Tuesday, Sept. 4, 2012.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    Syria’s children are regularly the victims or witnesses of “senseless acts of torture and violence,” according to a report Tuesday by a leading charity.

    Save the Children’s report called “Untold Atrocities, The Stories of Syria’s Children” details horrific accounts from Syrian refugees such as 9-year-old Nur, who said, “I used to like hiding. Hiding is better than dying,” and Munther, 10, who told charity workers how a boy standing next to him was shot dead outside a school and he was hit in the neck.

    Thousands of children have died in the conflict and “many more have been injured, traumatized or forced to flee their homes,” the report said. “Boys and girls continue to be killed, maimed and tortured. These appalling violations against children must stop and those carrying them out held to account.”


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    It added that the testimonies “corroborate violations documented by the United Nations, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.”

    “The acts described are consistent, recurring and appalling,” it said. The organization deals with children and families in both Lebanon and Jordan.

    The charity is asking people to sign a petition, "Stop the Crimes Against Syria's Children" to U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

    “Horrific acts of violence are being committed against children in Syria,” Carolyn Miles, Save the Children’s president and CEO, said in a press release. “These children need specialist care now to help them recover from their shocking experiences. Their testimonies should also be documented so that these violent acts against children are not committed with impunity.”

    Muhammed Muheisen, AP

    Syrian child, Taybah Al-Hajji, 1, whose family fled their home in Aleppo due to Syrian government shelling, sits next to her one-month-old brother Abdulghani, at the Bab Al-Salameh border crossing near Turkey.

    Miles is in New York for the United Nations General Assembly hearings this week. On Tuesday, President Barack Obama condemned Syrian President Bashar Assad as “a dictator who massacres his people” in a speech to the United Nations General Assembly.

    Kathryn Bolles, the charity's senior director of emergency health and nutrition, told NBC News by phone that atrocities against children were being carried out by all sides.

    She said that the stories in the report, detailed below, were illustrative and that there were "hundreds of thousands of families that are going through this." Bolles added that some of the names had been changed to protect the children and their families.

    NYT: In Arab Spring, Obama finds harsh lessons on diplomacy

    Nur, who is now living with her family in the Za’atari refugee camp in Jordan, told the charity that she did not play. “Why? Because I am not young anymore. I go to the bathroom, take a shower and then sleep. That is all,” she said.

    Jonathan Hyams/Save the Children

    Nur, nine, came to Jordan with her family to escape the violence in Syria. She now lives in a tent with her family in Za'atari refugee camp in the desert of northern Jordan where conditions are harsh and the camp authorities are underfunded and struggling to meet the basic needs of the overwhelming numbers of refugees arriving each day.

    She said she had once been happy in Syria. “Then the violence started and they started to make us suffer. There was nothing that they did not use to hurt us with,” she said.

    The Arab Spring is dead -- and Syria is writing its obituary

    Nur spoke of Syrian forces using airstrikes, bombings, missiles and “every weapon you could think” against people in her home village.

    “I was terrified. Us along with my cousins, neighbours, aunts and people we know used  to go to the shelter to hide. I used to like hiding. Hiding is better than dying,” she said.

    'I ran and I cried'
    Ten-year-old Ala’a told how he ran “so fast” when shells started to fall. “I ran and I cried at the same time,” he said.

    “When we were being bombed we had nothing. No food, no water, no toys – nothing,” he said.

    “…One day men with guns broke into our house. They pulled out our food, threw it on the floor and stamped on it, so it would be too dirty to eat. Then we had nothing at all. Soon after that we came here.”

    NBC's Richard Engel, who has just returned from his third trip inside Syria, since the uprising began, joins Andrea Mitchell Reports to discuss the situation on the ground.

    Syria activist: Hundreds feared dead as Assad escalates airstrikes

    Ala’a's father, Nabil, said his son “cries a lot without telling us why and he’s started sleepwalking. My other child has started to stutter.”

    “The younger children still cry when a plane goes overhead or a pot falls to the ground,” he said. “They’re traumatized. I’ve spoken to lots of parents and they say the same thing. No child has escaped this. Children aren’t children anymore. Watch any child. They play and look normal, but they can only keep this up for a while, and then they become sad again.”

    He said he had seen children used as human shields in the village of Saydeh. “When two tanks came into the village I saw children attached to them, tied up by their hands and feet, and by their torsos. The tanks came through the village and no one stood in their way or fought because we knew we would kill the children,” he said.

    “After that happened I cried like a woman. I was close to losing my mind. I have never felt so helpless as the moment I saw those children strapped to those tanks,” he added. “… Let everyone know this is where this terrible thing happened.”

    'She died feeling sad'
    Omar, 11, who also lives in the Za’atari refugee camp, told the charity workers that one day he was playing with his brother, and the two boys were teasing their cousin.

    “She was upset. She left us and went to her house. That night, a shell destroyed my nine-year-old cousin’s house – the one we’d upset during the day. I regret that she died feeling sad,” he said.

    Mission 'nearly impossible': Syria envoy downbeat on new job

    The report said 10-year-old Munther, who said he wanted to be a doctor, had two bullet-sized wounds on his neck.

    “I was on the street when the bullets were first fired. We were standing outside a school – we’d just posed for a photo. There were lots of children around,” he said.

    “Then the shooting started. There was chaos. Everyone was screaming. There were bullets and blood everywhere. A boy called Amjad was standing next to me. He was shot in the head. I didn’t realize at first that he was dead. He fell forward on his knees, in a praying position. He was 15,” he added.

    “Then I felt a terrible pain. I’d been shot too – in my neck. Here, see my scars … Luckily I was with my friend’s mother. She picked me up and took me straight to a clinic to get help. I recovered from the shooting. We held a funeral for Amjad. Lots of people came. … I was so sad that day.”

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    • Taiwanese ships clash with Japanese coast guard over disputed islands
    • Class wars: 'Gate-gate' scandal swamps UK PM
    • Ahmadinejad rips Israel, US ahead of final UN speech
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    • Religious pilgrimages: a multi-billion dollar industry
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    21 comments

    Recently, I was looking at one of the news sites for China and saw several interesting things. One was the new aircraft carrier. Their state run news agency has a location where they highlight the Military news. On that site, there is an opportunity for visitors to respond to the news stories. One s …

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    Explore related topics: children, syria, bashar-assad, atrocities, featured, save-the-children
  • 21
    Sep
    2012
    1:58pm, EDT

    Ax-wielding man kills 3 kids, wounds 13 in China

     

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News Beijing

    An ax-wielding man burst into a day care center in China and attacked the children inside, killing three and wounding another 13 before police subdued him.

    The incident took place Friday in China’s southern province of Guangxi.


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    Little else is known about the incident, which was first reported in China’s official state news agency, Xinhua. The children, aged between 6 and 12, were reportedly sitting down for lunch at a day care center in a local Pingan county residential compound when the man entered and began swinging at them with an ax.

    Wounded children — some severely injured — were rushed to local area hospitals. Police who arrived at the scene were able to disarm the man and arrest him.

    Police were still investigating the motivation behind the attack.


    Violent incidents against children are not rare in mainland China. In the past two years, a string of attacks at schools and day care centers involving lone attackers rattled the country, culminating with a series of three consecutive school attacks that took place over a three-day period in 2010.

    In one of the incidents, Xu Yuyuan, 47, entered a Jiangsu province school in April 2010 and stabbed 29 children and three teachers. Xu told a court the next month that he wanted to "vent his rage against society," and that he was angry after a series of public humiliations and unsuccessful business ventures.

    Determined to show that authorities were getting tough on crime against children, the court sentenced Xu to death after a half-day trial.

    At the time, officials and social commentators argued that the incidents were isolated and committed by mentally unstable persons or those with extreme grievances against the government.

    Many around the country, however, argued the attacks underscored both increasing societal pressures on Chinese people and an urgent need for China to overhaul how it approaches mental health evaluation and treatment.

    Earlier this year, Chinese legislatures had begun discussion on much needed mental health law reforms.

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    208 comments

    China needs to implement tougher ax laws. Ax free school zones , mandatory ax registration. Get the UN committee on reducing the proliferation of axes worldwide.

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    Explore related topics: china, children, featured, ax, guangxi, ed-flanagan, commentid-ed-flanagan, commentid-ax
  • 19
    Sep
    2012
    1:39pm, EDT

    Israel's ultra-Orthodox community confronts child sex abuse with new book

    By Paul Goldman , NBC News

    TEL AVIV – The ultra-Orthodox community in Israel, known as Haredim, has a closed and secluded way of life. They look at the secular population with a degree of suspicion and try to manage their own affairs. To that end, rabbis try to deal with cases of violence and sexual misconduct internally – without alerting outside authorities.

    That cultural mentality makes it even harder to tackle sensitive subjects like the sexual abuse of children.

    Now, for the first time, a book published in Hebrew tackles the growing problem of sexual abuse among children in the ultra-religious community, trying to break the silence in the closed community.

    Paul Goldman / NBC News

    The cover of Ella Bargai's book that aims to educate ultra-Orthodox Israeli Jews about the dangers of child sex abuse,

    “Our main goal was to create a dialogue between children and their parents,” Ella Bargai, a secular Jew working at the Intercultural Center for Human Sexuality and Sexual Life near Jerusalem, told NBC News. She joined forces with Nitai Melamed, an Orthodox rabbi, to write a book called, “A Better Safe than Sorry Book.”


    Since the Orthodox community is so closed, there are no reliable statistics on the depth of the problem in Israel. In New York’s ultra-Orthodox Jewish community, the crimes – and the effort to cover them up by prominent members of the community – gained widespread media attention and public condemnation, leading to several arrests this summer.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The book is unique for the Israeli Orthodox community because it encourages both religious children and their parents the importance of talking about the issue. The book’s central message to children is the crucial fact that nobody has the right to touch your private body parts.

    Bargai said the main obstacle religious kids have is the fact they just don’t have the vocabulary needed to describe the bad things people can do to them.  For example, Orthodox children are not taught the Hebrew words for sexual organs.

    "There is a huge anguish and pain trying to describe sexual abuse to a parent. With the book we try to break this taboo of not talking," Bargai said.

    The book is based on American author Sol Gordon's “A Better Safe Than Sorry Book: A Family Guide for Sexual Assault Prevention,” published in 1996.

    Paul Goldman / NBC News

    A page from the Israel book educating ultra-Orthodox children and parents about sex abuse.

    The Israeli version represents a breakthrough because the authors worked closely with religious leaders who understand the importance of establishing a dialogue that can combat sexual abuse.  It is being distributed by religious teachers to parents and their kids in Israel and they are encouraged to read it together.

    Its drawings show religious characters in the modest dress they are familiar with – men have beards and sidelocks, while women have their heads covered. There is even a cuddly lamb that Orthodox children can relate to because the lamb is a kosher animal.

    On one page a religious man offers candy to a girl who is warned that this kind of behavior is dangerous and that she should be cautious.

    "Children are curious," said Bargai, "and the information we provide will help them to protect themselves."

    In the book there is an illustration of a girl with the warning caption: "Nobody has any right to touch your body's private areas and you are not supposed to touch those areas on anyone else."

    Paul Goldman / NBC News

    A page from the new book in Israel aimed at educating children about the dangers of sex abuse.

    So far, the book has been well-received in Israel; it sold out of its first printing soon after its publication and will be reissued soon. The book is also available in English.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    • France shutters embassies, schools over new Muhammad cartoon
    • Ultra-Orthodox Jews confront child sex abuse
    • State Department: No secret plan to invade Canada
    • Early morning fire leaves hundreds homeless in the Philippines
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    • Democracy declined worldwide in 2011 with Arab Spring at risk, watchdog says
    • In Niger, child marriage on rise due to hunger

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    70 comments

    This is a good start; Isrealis now realize they got problems and they have to admit it... Next, besides uncovering perverts, isreal needs to uncover and treat thiefs, cheats, swindlers.. Next, teach every isreali citizen that they are normal human beings, they are not superior to anybody, in fact, p …

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    Explore related topics: israel, children, sex-abuse, haredim, paul-goldman, ultra-orthodox-community
  • 22
    Jun
    2012
    9:59am, EDT

    UK parents charged with murder of 6 children kept from their funeral

    Phil Noble / Reuters

    The coffins of six children who died in a house fire are carried into St Mary's Church for their funeral service in Derby, central England, Friday. Their parents, Mick and Mairead Philpott have been charged with causing their deaths.

    By msnbc.com staff

    LONDON -- A British couple charged with the murders of their six children were kept in jail pending their trial as the children's mass funeral was held Friday, according to a report.

    The children -- Duwayne Philpott, 13; and younger siblings Jade, 10; John, 9; Jack, 8; Jesse, 6; and Jayden, 5 -- died in an arson attack on their home in Derby, England, on May 11.



    Follow @msnbc_world

    Their parents, Mick and Mairead Philpott, broke down in tears at a press conference days after the fire; they were arrested on suspicion of murder on May 29.

    Assistant Chief Constable Steve Cotterill, of Derbyshire Constabulary, said the funeral would be "an understandably difficult and emotional time and I would particularly ask that anyone attending, and the media who cover the funeral, respect the privacy of the family and mourners," according to ITV News.

    Watch on YouTube

    Six horse-drawn hearses took the children's bodies to St. Mary's Catholic Church in Bridgegate, where Friday's service was held.

    Read more stories on ITV News

    Andrew Yates / AFP - Getty Images, file

    A firefighter walks past the fire-damaged house in which six children died in Derby, central England.

    The Order of Service, which was reproduced by ITV News, included tributes and photographs of each of the children:

    • Duwayne was "a charming and caring young boy that was turning into a young man."
    • Jade was "a beautiful princess who became a mother hen to her younger brothers … she would always carry them around on her hip."
    • John was "a cheeky chappy, always lively and ready to pick a fight with all the boys… No matter how much he was in trouble he would always crack a smile and find it a joke."
    • Jack was "a real pretty boy with bright blue eyes. He was cute, cuddly and content with everyything… he was the quietest sibling and he was a delight to be around."
    • Jesse was "crazy, clumsy and cheerful… He was fearless, getting into scrambles with his brothers, with no care in the world."
    • Jayden "being the baby of the family was looked after by his big brothers and mothered by Jade… He would go into the garden clean and come back into the house messy in minutes."

    The Telegraph newspaper reported the children's parents, who are in jail awaiting trial, were not allowed to attend the funeral by the prison service.

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    33 comments

    Rest in Peace sweet little ones.

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    Explore related topics: fire, children, england, murder, arson, featured, derby, philpott
  • 12
    Jun
    2012
    6:39am, EDT

    UN: Children tortured, used as human shields in Syria

    Activists say that more than 1,000 children have been killed since the uprising in Syria began last year.

    By F. Brinley Bruton, msnbc.com

    Children were slaughtered, tortured, sexually attacked and used as human shields by pro-government Syrian forces, according to a damning United Nations report released late on Monday. 

    "Children were victims of killing and maiming, arbitrary arrest, detention, torture and ill-treatment, including sexual violence, by the Syrian Armed Forces, the intelligence forces, and the Shabbiha militia," the U.N.'s Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict Radhika Coomaraswamy said in a release issued along with the report. 


    Shaam News Network / AFP - Getty Images

    Residents of Houla ride in the back of a pick-up truck on June 5, according to Syrian opposition's Shaam News Network. In May, a massacre in Houla claimed 108 lives including those of 49 children, according to UN figures.

    The shabiha are a pro-government militia that recruits largely from the Alawite community- the same Muslim sect as President Bashar Assad. Sunnis, who make up the majority of the rebels, are an estimated 74 percent of the population.

    NYT: Assad's response to Syria unrest leaves his own sect divided 

    In an interview with the BBC, Coomaraswamy said she had learned of "horrific" reports in Syria. She told the BBC:

    "We are really quite shocked. Killing and maiming of children in cross-fire is something we come across in many conflicts but this torture of children in detention, children as young as 10, is something quite extraordinary, which we don't really see in other places."

    ....

    "We also had testimonies and saw children who had been tortured, and who carried the torture marks with them. We also heard of children being used -- this was recounted to us by some children -- of being put on tanks and being used as human shields so that the tanks would not be fired upon."

    Coomaraswamy also criticized the rebellion's main armed group for its treatment of children.

    'Battle is in Damascus' as Syrian tanks fire in 12-hour exchange

    A civil war is breaking out in Syria between the Sunnis and Shiites with militia groups fighting along sectarian lines. Sources report regular gun battles close to the presidential palace where the Syrian regime is experiencing problems controlling its own armed forces. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    "For the first time we heard of children being recruited by the Free Syrian Army mainly in medical and service orientated jobs but still on the front line," she told the BBC.

    The U.N. says Syrian forces have killed more than 10,000 people in the crackdown on an uprising inspired by revolts which toppled four Arab leaders in 2011. Syrian authorities say foreign-backed militants have killed 2,600 soldiers and police. 

    Activists say Syria's army and pro-Assad militia have committed two massacres in the last two weeks, in the Houla region and a farming hamlet called Mazraat al-Qubeir. Syrian authorities blamed the killings on "terrorists."

    Report: Journalist says rebels tried to get him killed

    The United States and other Western nations who have been critical of Assad's regime had little new to suggest to end Syria's 15-month long crisis, which has seen the United Nations Security Council deadlocked amid continued support for Assad by veto-holding Russia and China.

    The use of civilians as human shields has been reported before.  On March 25, Human Rights Watch released a video purportedly showing how Syrians were forced to walk in front of armored personnel carriers: 

    The international rights organization also quoted a resident of Kafr Nabl as saying:

    "They took maybe 25 people, including me. There were also eight children, aged from 10 to 15, among us. They made us march in front and around the military vehicles to some houses where they were searching for wanted opposition activists. We marched for about 600 meters. They were insulting us the whole time. They arrested several people from the houses. Then they made us march back to their base, after which they released all of us, apart from the detained activists. The whole operation lasted for about two hours."

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    513 comments

    I believe immediate action is appropriate. The U.N. security council , at its next state luncheon, should develop strong language against this and ask that Syria get back to them with an answer by the fall.

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    Explore related topics: children, syria, united-nations, featured, radhika-coomaraswamy, shabiha, brinley-bruton, special-representative-for-children-and-armed-conflict
  • 29
    May
    2012
    10:04am, EDT

    Parents arrested after six children killed in UK house fire

    Parents arrested over deaths of six children in UK house fire. ITV News' Damon Green reports.

    Watch on YouTube
    By ITV News

    LONDON - The parents of six children killed in an arson attack on their home in Britain were arrested on suspicion of murder on Tuesday.

    Mick Philpott, 55, and his wife Mairead, 31, were detained in connection with the attack on the house in Derby, in the English Midlands.


    The victims, whose ages ranged from 13 to five, died after the blaze at the house in Victory Road, Allenton, on May 11.

    Two weeks ago the couple broke down in tears at a press conference, just days after the incident:

    The family once appeared on the British version of The Jeremy Kyle Show.

    Click here for more coverage from Britain's ITV News

    Derbyshire Police said a 55-year-old man and a 31-year-old woman from Derby were arrested on Tuesday morning but did not name them.

    'Crucial information'
    Jade Philpott, 10, and brothers John, nine, Jack, seven, Jessie, six, and Jayden, five, all perished in the blaze, while Duwayne Philpott, 13, died of his injuries in Birmingham Children's Hospital two days' later.

    In a statement, Assistant Chief Constable Steve Cotterill said: “I suspect there may still be people with crucial information who have not yet come forward to speak to us.

    “In view of the arrests, I would urge anyone who may have been holding back, not felt comfortable to voice their concerns or not had the confidence, to do so now. They have my personal reassurance that we will deal with their information sensitively.

    “We still need information to help us in this inquiry. The latest arrests are just one step further in the investigation. It is absolutely vital that if you know anything you think could help us, come forward now, do not wait any longer. It is important that we find justice for these six young children.”

    A 28-year-old woman and 38-year-old man, both from Derby, were arrested earlier this month on suspicion of murder but were later released without charge, police said. 

    ITV News is the UK partner of NBC News.

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    • Video: British woman may face death in Indonesia

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    21 comments

    Wow that was a whole lot of no information, another poorly written article. RIP Jade, John, Jack, Jessie, Jayden, and Duwayne Philpott.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: britain, fire, children, uk, itv, derby, crime-courts
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