A/RES/52/107
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5. Recommends that the humanitarian concerns relating to children affected by armed conflict and
their protection be fully reflected in United Nations field operations, which, inter alia, promote peace,
prevent and resolve conflicts and implement peace agreements;
6. Underlines the importance that measures to ensure respect for the rights of the child, including
in the areas of health and nutrition, formal, informal or non-formal education, physical and psychological
recovery and social reintegration, be included within emergency and other humanitarian assistance policies
and programmes;
7. Stresses the need for Governments and other parties to armed conflict to take measures,
including the establishment, for example, of "days of tranquillity" and "corridors of peace", to ensure
humanitarian access, the delivery of humanitarian relief and the provision of services, such as education
and health, including immunization of children affected by armed conflict;
8. Supports the work of the open-ended inter-sessional working group of the Commission on
Human Rights on a draft optional protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child related to the
involvement of children in armed conflict, and expresses the hope that it will make further progress prior
to the fifty-fourth session of the Commission with a view to finalizing this work;
9. Urges States and all other parties to armed conflict to adopt all necessary measures to end the
use of children as soldiers and to ensure their demobilization and reintegration into society, including
through adequate education and training, in a manner that fosters their self-respect and dignity, and invites
the international community to assist in this endeavour;
10. Welcomes increased international efforts in various forums with respect to anti-personnel mines,
recognizes the positive effect on children of those efforts, and, in this regard, takes due note of the
conclusion of the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of
Anti-Personnel Mines and on Their Destruction and its implementation by those States that become parties
to it, as well as of the amended Protocol on Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of Mines, Booby-traps
and Other Devices (Protocol II)13 of the Convention on Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of Certain
Conventional Weapons Which May Be Deemed to Be Excessively Injurious or to Have Indiscriminate
Effects;14
11. Calls upon all States and relevant United Nations bodies, including the United Nations Voluntary
Trust Fund for Assistance in Mine Clearance, to contribute on an ongoing basis to international mine
clearance efforts, and urges States to take further action to promote gender- and age-appropriate
mine-awareness programmes and child-centred rehabilitation, thereby reducing the number and the plight
of child victims;
12. Reaffirms that rape in the conduct of armed conflict constitutes a war crime and that under
certain circumstances it constitutes a crime against humanity and an act of genocide, as defined in the
13
See CCW/CONF. I/16 (Part I).
14
See The United Nations Disarmament Yearbook, Vol. 5: 1980 (United Nations publication, Sales
No. E.81.IX.4), appendix VII.
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