These range from the devastating consequences that sexual violence has for children, their communities, and societies at large, to the lack of funding to address the issue. The alarming findings of this report have far-reaching implications. The countries with the highest share of children living in conflict zones with reports of sexual violence perpetrated by conflict actors against children include Colombia (with 24% of all children in the country facing this risk), Iraq (with 49% of all children at risk), Somalia (56%), South Sudan (19%), Syria (48%) and Yemen (83%). In the most recent years we also see that a bigger share of armed actors who commit sexual violence in conflict also perpetrate it against children. The number of children at risk fluctuates from one year to another, but the upward trend is very clear. Our analysis shows that the number of children at risk of sexual violence committed by conflict actors is ten times higher today than in 1990. For children, their age and gender play a significant role in their vulnerability, placing adolescent girls at particularly high risk of sexual violence in conflict settings. Worldwide, people of all genders and all ages experience sexual violence, which is fundamentally rooted in unequal power dynamics. This report presents the very first quantitative analysis of the risk of sexual violence against children in conflict for the period 1990-2019. We estimate that a staggering 72 million of them, or one in six, live 50 kilometres or closer to conflicts where armed groups or forces have perpetrated sexual violence against children during the last year. Globally, 426 million children live in conflict zones today.
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