International community uses day care centers to abuse and traffic children

The UN child care trial program leaves at least 145 children missing and 400 reports of verbal, physical, psychological, and sexual abuse of children under ten years of age.


Reference image


The UN was developing the integration of child care centers for children under ten years old for families who cannot afford child care called "Sun Light," supported by funding from the UNICEF and UNESCO economic fund, with approximately 30 million dollars invested in the centers, personnel, development, and material, to develop and expand it to more countries properly. The test countries were Russia, India, Pakistan, Argentina, China, and Belgium; the international community agreed to a quarterly report on the development of the program to see its effectiveness, especially in developing countries.

Yesterday evening, an anonymous complaint was made public from a family in Badami, South India, about the disappearance of a 5-year-old girl from the care center; the complaint goes on to allege that the child had sustained injuries to her arm from an apparent physical blow by an adult at the center. From this news, more situations of physical impacts began to be made public, as in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where there was a complaint because a center worker had sexually abused a 9-year-old minor. Three days later, she disappeared from the center due to an "oversight of the security door."

It is estimated that approximately 145 children are missing, and 400 reports of verbal, physical, psychological, and sexual abuse of children under ten years of age. The reports are dated from 1 year ago to the current date, so the entities of the centers were illegally concealing them. The centers where the child abuse was discovered were in Russia, India, Pakistan, and Argentina, respectively, in relatively remote cities such as Anadyr and Punjab, to have fewer problems with the local law and because people usually have low incomes. 

Countries like China and Belgium were also part of the program, but there are no reports or records of abuse on their premises. Hence, Li Shangfum, China's defense minister, appeared after some time out of politics to state that "The fact that an international fund has paid for it and that we are only supervising the process does not give us the right to abuse innocent souls"; At the same time as Li Shangfu, Ludivine Dedonder, Belgium's Minister of Defense and Public Security, agreed to an international meeting with the countries in the program to discuss the facts, but not the facts of the case. The UN stated that they provided the necessary economic funds but that each country was in charge of managing and adapting it so that it would work in the most needy and crowded areas.

Valeria Gutierrez Contreras
Delegate of The New York Times
Creado con Webnode Cookies
¡Crea tu página web gratis! Esta página web fue creada con Webnode. Crea tu propia web gratis hoy mismo! Comenzar