A/RES/60/231
United Nations system-wide response to children and armed conflict, 17 recommends
that the Secretary-General extend the mandate of the Special Representative for a
further period of three years;
36. Recalls the recommendation contained in resolution 51/77 that the
Special Representative foster international cooperation to ensure respect for
children’s rights in situations of armed conflict and contribute to the coordination of
efforts by Governments and relevant United Nations bodies, as well as the request to
Governments and relevant United Nations bodies to cooperate with the Special
Representative;
III
Children infected with and affected by HIV/AIDS
37. Acknowledges that prevention, care, support, including psychosocial
support, and treatment for those infected with and affected by HIV/AIDS, including
children, are mutually reinforcing elements of an effective response and must be
integrated in a comprehensive approach to combat the pandemic, reaffirms that the
full realization of human rights and fundamental freedoms for all is an essential
element in the global response to the HIV/AIDS pandemic, and reaffirms also the
importance of the elimination of all forms of discrimination against people living
with or at risk of HIV/AIDS, especially those most vulnerable;
38.
Calls upon States:
(a) To ensure universal access to comprehensive information related to
HIV/AIDS prevention by 2010 through education, life skills training for adolescents
and the use of child-targeted media and to ensure that this information is relevant,
gender- and age-appropriate and timely, engaging the meaningful participation of
children and their parents or caregivers in its development and recognizing children
as agents of change, to enable them to protect themselves from HIV infection;
(b) To support adolescents to be able to deal positively and responsibly with
their sexuality in order to protect themselves from HIV/AIDS infection and to
implement measures to increase their capacity to protect themselves from
HIV/AIDS, through, inter alia, the provision of health care, including for sexual and
reproductive health, and through prevention education that promotes gender
equality;
(c) To put in place strategies, policies and programmes that identify and
address those factors that make individuals particularly vulnerable to HIV infection
in order to complement prevention programmes that address activities that place
individuals at risk of HIV infection, such as risky and unsafe sexual behaviour and
injecting drug use;
(d) To ensure that, in preventing and addressing HIV/AIDS, particular
attention is paid to girls, deeply concerned that the global HIV/AIDS pandemic
disproportionately affects women and girls, that the majority of new HIV infections
occur among young people and that unequal legal, economic and social status,
negative or judgemental attitudes that limit the ability of girls to take preventive
measures and violence against girls increase their vulnerability to HIV/AIDS;
_______________
17
A/59/331.
9