Spain: Power outages put children’s lives at risk in informal settlement – UN experts

  • 12/22/2020
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GENEVA (22 December 2020) – A two-month power outage in a vast informal settlement near Madrid is endangering the health of some 1,800 children, UN human rights experts* said today, calling on the Government of Spain to immediately restore electricity as temperatures fall to freezing. "Children in Cañada Real Galiana are truly suffering, and their health is at risk," the experts warned. "Now that winter is closing in – and especially during the COVID-19 pandemic – electricity must be restored." The latest power outage started on 2 October and has affected at least 4,500 people, particularly in Sectors 5 and 6 of Cañada Real Galiana. The settlement is home to some 8,000 people who live in a 16km-long, 75m-wide strip established more than 40 years ago. Many residents are migrants or Roma. "Madrid is notoriously cold and now that temperatures are plunging, at least one baby had already been taken to hospital with symptoms of hypothermia," the experts said. "Without electricity, there is no heat in homes and no hot water, meaning children cannot shower or wash properly. During the COVID-19 pandemic, when hygiene is more important than ever, this is especially troubling." The health of many children has already suffered: those who use electric wheelchairs cannot charge their batteries; children with diabetes are struggling to keep insulin at the proper temperature; children with autism are having trouble adapting to the lack of light, and a girl who normally uses oxygen therapy equipment for 15 or 16 hours a day has been deprived of it. "The lack of electricity not only violates these children"s right to adequate housing, it is having a very serious effect on their rights to health, food, water, sanitation and education," the experts said. Children have no light to do their homework, and cannot use the Internet for classes that have moved online during the pandemic. In addition, NGOs that provide essential educational support to students outside of school hours cannot operate because they have no heating or electricity. "Without decisive action to immediately remedy this situation, the chronic educational disadvantage of the children living in Cañada Real is going to get even worse," the experts said. They criticised the authorities who blamed the power outages on illegal marijuana plantations and implied that residents of the informal settlement are criminals. "We call on all politicians to stop stigmatising migrants, members of the Roma minority and anyone who lives in poverty," the experts said. "The people of Cañada Real urgently need the support of the Government to achieve adequate living conditions, not verbal attacks that provoke public hostility." The expert has been in contact with the Government of Spain on these issues. ENDS

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