Explosive weapons killed most children on record in 2024: NGO

1 / 2
Injured children wait for treatment at Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on July 28, 2025, following Israeli bombardment on the Mawasi area of Khan Yunis. (AFP file photo)
2 / 2
Remnant of a rocket in northern Gaza. (Save the Children photo)
Short Url
Updated 22 November 2025
Follow

Explosive weapons killed most children on record in 2024: NGO

  • Nearly 12,000 children were killed or injured in conflict last year worldwide, said the UK-based Save the Children charity
  • Over 20,000 children have been killed since Israel launched its war on Gaza since the October 2023 Hamas attack, the report said

LONDON: Explosive weapons killed or injured children at record levels last year, as wars increasingly move into urban areas, Save the Children said in a report published Thursday.
Nearly 12,000 children were killed or injured in conflict last year worldwide, said the UK-based charity, citing UN figures. This was the highest number since records began in 2006, and was up by 42 percent on the 2020 total.
Previously, children in war zones were more likely to die from malnutrition, disease or failing health systems.

But as conflicts, such as those in Gaza, Sudan and Ukraine, take place more and more in urban areas, children are being caught up as bombs and drones strike hospitals, schools and residential areas, Save the Children said.
More than 70 percent of child casualties in war zones in 2024 were caused by explosive weapons, such as missiles and grenades, up from an average of around 59 percent in the period from 2020 to 2024, according to the report.

“The world is witnessing the deliberate destruction of childhood — and the evidence is undeniable,” said Narmina Strishenets, senior conflict and humanitarian advocacy adviser at Save the Children UK.
“Children are paying the highest price in today’s wars... Missiles are falling where children sleep, play and learn — turning the very places that should be the safest, like their homes and schools, into death traps.”
Children’s smaller bodies and developing organs means injuries from blasts can be much more severe and recovery can be more complex and prolonged.
“Children are far more vulnerable to explosive weapons than adults,” said Paul Reavley, a consultant paediatric emergency physician and co-founder of the Paediatric Blast Injury Partnership, a coalition between Save the Children UK and medical specialists.
“Their anatomy, physiology, behavior and psychosocial needs make them disproportionately affected.”
The conflicts that claimed the most casualties among children in 2024 were in the Palestinian territories of Gaza and the occupied West Bank, Sudan, Myanmar, Ukraine and Syria.
The deadliest conflict in recent years for children is in Gaza, where 20,000 children have been killed since Israel launched its war on the territory in retaliation for Islamist group Hamas’s October 2023 attack, the report said.


Taiwan says Chinese drone made ‘provocative’ flight over South China Sea island

Updated 11 sec ago
Follow

Taiwan says Chinese drone made ‘provocative’ flight over South China Sea island

TAIPEI: A Chinese reconnaissance drone briefly flew over the Taiwan-controlled Pratas Islands at the top end of the South China Sea on Saturday, in ​what Taiwan’s defense ministry called a “provocative and irresponsible” move.
Democratically governed Taiwan, which China claims as its own territory, reports Chinese military activity around it on an almost daily basis, including drones though they very rarely enter Taiwanese airspace.
Taiwan’s defense ministry said the Chinese reconnaissance drone was detected around dawn on Saturday ‌approaching the Pratas ‌Islands and flew in its ‌airspace ⁠for ​eight ‌minutes at an altitude outside the range of anti-aircraft weapons.
“After our side broadcast warnings on international channels, it departed at 0548,” it said in a statement.
“Such highly provocative and irresponsible actions by the People’s Liberation Army seriously undermine regional peace and stability, violated international legal ⁠norms, and will inevitably be condemned,” it added.
Taiwan’s armed forces will ‌continue to maintain strict vigilance and monitoring, ‍and will respond in ‍accordance with the routine combat readiness rules, the ‍ministry said.
Calls to China’s defense ministry outside of office hours on a weekend went unanswered.
In 2022, Taiwan’s military for the first time shot down an unidentified civilian drone that ​entered its airspace near an islet off the Chinese coast controlled by Taiwan.
Lying roughly between ⁠southern Taiwan and Hong Kong, the Pratas are seen by some security experts as vulnerable to Chinese attack due to their distance — more than 400 km (250 miles) — from mainland Taiwan.
The Pratas, an atoll which is also a Taiwanese national park, are only lightly defended by Taiwan’s military, but lie at a highly strategic location at the top end of the disputed South China Sea.
China also views the Pratas as its ‌own territory.
Taiwan’s government rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims.