June 25, 2026, Thursday
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South Asia Unites to Accelerate Action on Ending Violence Against Children

Kathmandu: SAARC, Government of Sri Lanka, UNICEF Regional Office for South Asia (ROSA), WHO Regional Offices for South-East Asia (SEARO) and the Eastern Mediterranean (EMRO), and the Office of the Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General on Violence Against Children (OSRSG-VAC), convened the South Asia Ministerial Conference on Ending Violence Against Children (SAMC-EVAC) in Colombo, Sri Lanka from June 23 to June 24. 

The Conference brought together ministers, senior government officials, child protection leaders, development partners, and regional experts from across South Asia to strengthen regional commitment and accelerate collective action to end violence against children in all its forms.

Nepal’s delegation to the conference comprised the Ministry of Women, Children, Gender and Sexual Minorities, and Social Security (MoWCGSMSS), the Embassy of Nepal to Sri Lanka, and UNICEF Nepal. The delegation was led by Secretary Radhika Aryal and reflected sustained high-level commitment to the EVAC agenda.

Violence against children remains one of the most pervasive and harmful threats to the wellbeing and development of children in South Asia. Across the region, millions of children continue to experience physical, emotional, and sexual violence, including online. These experiences have lifelong consequences for children's health, education, protection, and future opportunities.

“Every child has the right to grow up free from violence, fear, and exploitation. Our shared responsibility is to build societies where every child is safe, valued, and given the opportunity to thrive with dignity and hope,” said Rt. Hon. Dr. Harini Amarasuriya, Prime Minister of Sri Lanka.

The Conference reaffirmed that ending violence against children is both a moral imperative and a development necessity. Participants emphasized that investing in prevention, social protection, family support services, and comprehensive child protection systems yield significant social and economic returns while contributing to stronger, healthier, and more resilient societies.

“Our regional fight is fundamentally tethered to the global promise of the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Let us be unequivocally clear: we cannot achieve the global goals if we fail our children.” said H.E. Md. Golam Sarwar, Secretary General of SAARC.

Building on the momentum generated by the First Global Ministerial Conference on Ending Violence Against Children held in Bogotá, Colombia, in November 2024, and the Ministerial Information Sharing Meeting “Elevating the Ending Violence Against Children (EVAC) Agenda in South Asia” Kathmandu, held on 23 June 2025, delegates reviewed progress made by countries in implementing national commitments and pledges, including strengthening legal and policy frameworks, expanding child protection services, improving reporting and response mechanisms, and promoting positive parenting and violence prevention initiatives.

Building on ministerial participation at the 2024 Global Ministerial Conference in Bogotá and continued engagement through regional platforms, Nepal also presented notable progress, including ongoing legislative reforms, the establishment of a dedicated juvenile court, and the adoption of the National Plan of Action for Children (2026). The country also highlighted expansion of child protection systems through the appointment of Child Welfare Officers, scaling up child helpline services, strengthening digital referral pathways, and advancing data and monitoring systems through the Child Protection Information Management System (CPIMS).

Despite these advances, significant challenges remain: recent data indicate that 27.6 per cent of girls are married before the age of 18, 78.7 per cent of children experience violent discipline, 12 per cent of children are engaged in child labour, and 9.3 per cent of young people report symptoms of anxiety and depression (Nepal Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2024-2025). Nepal emphasized that addressing these gaps will require accelerated implementation, including finalizing legislative reforms, strengthening child-responsive budgeting, and ensuring sustainable financing and a professional child protection workforce to deliver on national commitments.

The Conference also highlighted the importance of the Child Protection Systems Strengthening Framework as a practical roadmap for coordinated action across sectors. The conference underscored the importance of effective multisectoral coordination to accelerate ending violence against children from important sectors including health, education, justice, and social welfare and development sectors.

In her opening remarks, Dr. Najat Maalla M’jid, Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General on Violence Against Children, said, “Ending violence against children requires multistakeholder and cross border cooperation. At a time of growing global divisions, multilateralism remains one of our strongest tools for connecting partners, and spearheading solutions within the region and beyond, ensuring sustainable investment in child protection and wellbeing. Today’s conference in South Asia represents a key moment to continue working together and faster to keep our promise to end all forms of violence against children in all settings.”

The historic event also highlighted children’s voices from the SAARC region by 17 years old Sri Lankan student Sasindu Ranmith, President of National Children’s Council. “Violence does not happen in just one place. Many don’t even know where to go for help, and even when they do, they don’t trust the system.”

Another focus of the conference was the Call to Action to strengthen implementation of key strategies, monitoring progress, and enhance regional collaboration to accelerate efforts to end violence against children across South Asia applying whole-of-governments and whole-of- society approaches.

“Across South Asia, far too many children still live with violence in their everyday lives — at home, school, online, and in their communities, including through practices like corporal punishment that have lasting and damaging effects on their development and dignity. Governments across the region are showing important leadership by strengthening laws, expanding services, and investing in prevention. But we know that lasting change goes beyond legislation — it requires a shift in mindsets, in how children are raised, taught and protected. Ending violence against children is within our reach if we work together to support families, promote positive discipline, and challenge the norms that allow violence to persist, so that every child grows up safe, respected, and able to learn and thrive”, said Emma Brigham, UNICEF Representative in Sri Lanka.

The Officer-in-Charge for WHO South-East Asia Region, Dr Catharina Boehme, said, “Violence against children is not inevitable. It is preventable. Every child has the right to grow up safe, healthy and free from fear. The decisions taken by South Asian countries today can help break cycles of violence, ill-health, and poverty for generations to come.”

Throughout the two-day meeting, countries exchanged experiences, innovations, and lessons learned in addressing violence against children through integrated approaches involving health, education, social welfare, justice, law enforcement, and community systems. Delegates underscored the importance of evidence-based interventions, and called for increased investments in data systems, workforce capacity, social protection programmes, and prevention services.

As South Asia moves forward, SAARC, UNICEF, WHO, and the Office of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Violence Against Children reaffirm their commitment to supporting governments and partners in translating commitments into concrete action and measurable results for children.