Earlier this year Europol, the EU's law enforcement agency, announced
10,000 children had arrived in Europe, part of the wave of migration
that has swept through the continent in recent years. They had been
registered and identified. And then they had disappeared. Many of these
children are travelling alone. Some are as young as six years old. But
the authorities across Europe – the police, the border agencies, NGOs
and care organisations – have no idea where they have gone. They are at
risk from trafficking and exploitation as well as the hazards of the
journey across Europe – jumping onto lorries at Calais, sleeping rough
in Northern European weather.
Under
international and EU law children should be protected. There are
various systems and regulations in place to deal with unaccompanied
child migrants, whether refugees or not. But the system is failing and
children continue to go missing at an alarming rate. Why?
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