UNICEF works in the world’s most challenging places to reach the most disadvantaged children and adolescents – and to protect the rights of every child everywhere.
UNICEF is on the ground, bringing lifesaving help and hope to children and families. Non-political and impartial, we are never neutral when defending children’s rights and safeguarding their lives and futures.
Source: UNICEF
Rubika Shah’s award-winning and energising film charts a vital national protest movement. Rock Against Racism (RAR) was formed in 1976, prompted by ‘music’s biggest colonialist’ Eric Clapton and his support of racist MP Enoch Powell.
The campaign grew from Hoxton fanzine roots to 1978’s huge antifascist carnival in Victoria Park, featuring X-Ray Spex, Steel Pulse and, of course, The Clash, whose rock star charisma and gale-force conviction took RAR’s message to the masses.
Liam Neeson calls for an immediate end to the killing and maiming of children.
That was seven months ago. Nothing has changed.
"It's unbearable. The fighting has to stop. NOW"
At a U.N. camp in southern Gaza, children have been forced to flee their homes and live in squalid conditions while trying to make sense of a war with no end in sight. The New York Times Video.
Seven-year-old Lina and her family sleep on the floor of a tent outside al-Aqsa hospital in Gaza after fleeing their home in Jabaliya when the war between Hamas and Israel erupted. Now displaced, Lina and her siblings spend their days searching for food, queueing for water, and playing games. The Guardian spent a day on 9 November with Lina to see how children are surviving in Gaza. She told film-maker Majdi Fathi how she wishes she could sleep comfortably at night, free from the sounds of rockets and ambulances.
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