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Children

Jul 2006Average number of extra calories children consume for every hour of television they watch: 167
Source:

Jean Wiecha, Harvard Prevention Research Center (Boston)

Mar 2006Rank of 2004 among years when the most U.S. babies were born out of wedlock: 1
Source:

National Center for Health Statistics (Hyattsville, Md.)

Nov 2005Estimated chance, worldwide, that a father is unknowingly raising another man’s child: 1 in 25
Source:

Mark Bellis, Liverpool John Moores University (England)

Nov 2005Minimum number of infants impeded from boarding airplanes because their names were on the U.S. no-fly list: 14
Source:

U.S. Department of Homeland Security

Mar 2005Percentage of Americans aged 18 to 29 who speak to their parents every day: 48
Source:

Time magazine poll (N.Y.C.)

Feb 2005Percentage of children who by age seven have had at least one imaginary friend: 65
Source:

Dr. Marjorie Taylor, University of Oregon (Eugene)

Jan 2005Number of American five-year-olds named Lexus : 353
Source:

Cleveland Evans, Bellevue University (Bellevue, Nebr.)

Dec 2004Estimated average price of a female newborn in a Bulgarian infant-selling ring busted this summer : $6,000
Source:

State Police Headquarters (Pordenone, Italy)

Dec 2004Estimated average price of a male newborn : $18,000
Source:

State Police Headquarters (Pordenone, Italy)

Oct 2004Minimum number of U.S. children killed since 1998 as a result of heat stroke after being left locked in cars : 219
Source:

Jan Null, Department of Geosciences, San Francisco State University

Sep 2004Number of states whose legislatures have considered requesting changes in the No Child Left Behind Act : 31
Source:

National Conference of State Legislatures (Denver)

Sep 2004Number that have considered opting out of the Act’s requirements entirely : 6
Source:

National Conference of State Legislatures (Denver)

Sep 2004Number of resolutions regarding the Act that have actually passed : 2
Source:

National Conference of State Legislatures (Denver)

Mar 2004Number of a Texas toddler's burned fingers amputated in 1992 after she was left in a car with her mother's lit cigarette : 9.5
Source:

Philip Morris USA (Richmond)

July 14, 2007Police recovered a seven-week-old boy from the middle of a road in Ohio, where his naked mother had placed him in order to appease Satan.
Source:

WLWT

June 19, 2007Seven children were killed during a coalition-led airstrike in Afghanistan,. Seven children were killed during a coalition-led airstrike in Afghanistan,.
Source:

NYT

April 16, 2007An explosion near a Shiite shrine in Karbala killed 16 children.
Source:

AP via Tehran Times

April 3, 2007The market price for children in India slipped below that of buffalo.
Source:

Reuters

November 21, 2006 British Prime Minister Tony Blair announced that state-sponsored supernannies would be dispatched to deal with the United Kingdom's problem children. “Life isn't normal if you've got 12-year-olds out every night,” said Mr. Blair, “drinking and creating nuisance on the street with their parents not knowing or even caring.”
Source:

Guardian

November 1, 2006 Japanese law enforcement arrested a fetishist who had filled a warehouse with 5,000 pairs of stolen children's shoes.
Source:

Mianichi Daily News

October 5, 2006Further allegations emerged regarding the behavior of recently-resigned Congressman Mark Foley (R., Fla.) with underage pages. “He didn't want to talk about politics,” said one former page. “He wanted to talk about sex or my penis.” Congressman Jim Kolbe (R., Ariz.) said that he had confronted Foley over inappropriate contact with pages as early as 2000, and House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert vowed not to resign over the scandal.
Source:

ABC News

September 25, 2006An appeals court ruled that a Montana mother who gave bong hits to her baby daughter should not have to spend five years in jail.
Source:

Reuters via Yahoo! News

September 3, 2006A British professor announced that five-year-old girls were worried about their weight.
Source:

AFP via Breitbart

August 2, 2006The London School of Economics determined that good-looking couples are 36 percent more likely than their ugly counterparts to have female offspring.
Source:

Washington Post

July 21, 2006An American scientist claimed that parrots are as intelligent as five-year-old children.
Source:

ABC (Australia)

July 21, 2006Hillary Clinton warned that advertisers may attempt to place mind-controlling computer chips in the brains of children.
Source:

Daily News via Google News

July 12, 2006In Australia scientists found that mothers are less revolted by the smell of their child's feces than they are by the feces of other children.
Source:

Live Science

July 6, 2006 Iraqi prime minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki denounced the immunity of American soldiers in Iraq in connection with the rape and murder of a teenage girl and three of her relatives, including another child. Maj. Gen. William Caldwell said that there was no apparent connection between the rape-and-murder case and the killings of two soldiers from the unit under investigation.
Source:

Detroit Free Press

June 18, 2006In India an autopsy determined that the rogue elephant known as Master Killer died from multiple organ failure. “I had lost my two children,” said the elephant's distraught trainer. “But when I discovered this naughty tusker . . . I thought, 'Here's a newborn that will help me forget my own loss.'”
Source:

The Peninsula

April 17, 2006In Purcell, Oklahoma, a man named Kevin Ray Underwood was arrested for killing a 10-year-old girl named Jamie Rose Bolin. “I chopped her up,” he told police. “Regarding a potential motive,” said a police chief, “this appears to have been part of a plan to kidnap a person, rape them, torture them, kill them, cut off their head, drain the body of blood, rape the corpse, eat the corpse, then dispose of the organs and bones.” The police also announced that they had removed skewers and a meat tenderizer from Underwood's apartment.
Source:

Winston-Salem Journal

April 13, 2006Some Iraqis were changing their names to avoid being identified as either Sunni or Shiite. “[I] don't want my children to die,” said the Shiite father of Ali, Hassan, and Fatima, “just because of their names.”
Source:

Reuters via Yahoo! News

April 3, 2006Scientists in Michigan determined that children behave better after their tonsils are removed.
Source:

Forbes

March 16, 2006At least 2.5 million American children were taking antipsychotic drugs.
Source:

MSNBC

March 5, 2006In Nassau County, New York, a newborn baby was run over by several different vehicles; its sex and race could not be determined.
Source:

The New York Times

February 17, 2006In Harare, Zimbabwe, twenty newborn babies and fetuses were being pulled from the sewers each week.
Source:

CNN.com

February 7, 2006A Florida man named Frank Feldmann broke into a lighthouse and tied himself to its lightning rod in order to raise awareness for children. Police had difficulty communicating with Feldmann due to heavy winds and his tiger costume.
Source:

Local6.com

December 19, 2005 British scientists discovered that little girls like to torture their Barbie dolls by scalping, decapitating, burning, breaking, and microwaving them. “Girls,” explained a researcher, “feel violence and hatred towards their Barbie.”
Source:

Times Online

December 15, 2005 EBay was selling 85 toys a minute.
Source:

Click2Houston.com

October 25, 2005In Maryland the first kill of bear season was credited to Sierra Stiles, an eight-year-old girl, who shot a 211-pound bear twice in the chest with a .243-caliber rifle. “They won't eat now,” Sierra said of bears. “They won't eat a thing.”
Source:

The Washington Post

October 20, 2005 Babies were up for auction on eBay's Chinese subsidiary, Eachnet. Boys were going for $3,450, while girls cost $1,603.
Source:

BBC News

August 13, 2005A study found that 1 in 25 fathers was unknowingly raising another man's child, a situation referred to as “paternal discrepancy.”
Source:

LATimes.com

August 4, 2005In Los Angeles, cocaine was found in the bloodstream of a toddler who died when her father used her as a shield in a shootout with police.
Source:

AZCentral.com

July 23, 2005The Pentagon was stalling to avoid the release of more photographs and videos from Abu Ghraib prison. The videos are said to show young boys shrieking as they are anally raped.
Source:

Editor & Publisher

July 14, 2005A study found that the blood of newborn babies contained an average of two hundred industrial chemicals and pollutants including pesticides, perfluorochemicals, and waste from burning garbage.
Source:

Body Burden

July 8, 2005A man was arrested for paying children to yell at him because he is fat.
Source:

The Salt Lake Tribune

July 8, 2005Four teenagers were charged with urinating into the holy water at the Saint Pius X church in Rochester, New York.
Source:

The Pittsburgh Channel

May 31, 2005In New York City, a nine-year-old girl stabbed an eleven-year-old girl named Queen Washington to death. The girls were fighting over a pink rubber ball.
Source:

New York Daily News

April 30, 2005The state court of Florida blocked a thirteen-year-old girl from having an abortion. “Why can't I make my own decision?” the girl asked a judge. “I don't know,” the judge answered.
Source 1:

BBC News

Source 2:

Sun-Sentinel.com

April 21, 2005In Tehran, around 400 Iranians signed up to become suicide bombers. “As a Muslim, it is my duty,” said a mother of two, “to sacrifice my life for oppressed Palestinian children.”
Source:

Reuters

April 20, 2005 Texas legislators were considering a bill that would ban gay people from taking in foster children.
Source:

USA Today

April 15, 2005After returning to Afghanistan from the United States, where he underwent heart surgery, an Afghan toddler died.
Source:

BBC News

April 12, 2005Researchers found that parents tend to take better care of their better-looking children.
Source:

EurekAlert!

April 10, 2005The EPA decided to cancel a study of the effects of pesticides on infants.
Source:

Salt Lake Tribune

April 10, 2005The United Arab Emirates tested prototypes of robotic camel jockeys, which will replace child camel jockeys.
Source:

Reuters

April 1, 2005A former policeman was arrested for flying to Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, in order to molest boys.
Source:

Sign On San Diego

March 30, 2005A Minnesota man threw a toddler at a policeman.
Source:

WCCO

March 29, 2005The Boy Scouts' Director of Programming was arrested on child pornography charges.
Source:

CNN.com

March 29, 2005A huge naked screaming Wisconsin man was shot as he threatened his equally naked children with scissors.
Source:

JSOnline

March 18, 2005Police in Florida arrested a five-year-old girl at her kindergarten, binding her hands with plastic ties and placing handcuffs around her ankles. The girl, who weighs forty pounds, was upset about some jelly beans. “They set my baby up,” said her mother.
Source:

AP

March 11, 2005Paul Schaefer, a former member of the Luftwaffe who emigrated to Chile, founded a cult, provided torture facilities for Pinochet, and molested many children, was captured in Argentina.
Source:

Inter-press Service News Agency

March 11, 2005It was revealed that the United States had held children as young as eleven years old at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.
Source:

BBC News

March 9, 2005A badly prepared snack killed twenty-seven children in the Philippines.
Source:

ABC13

March 7, 2005An Arizona ice-cream-truck driver who raped and impregnated a nine-year-old girl was sentenced to life in prison.
Source:

KPHO

March 3, 2005A 13-pound, 13-ounce baby boy was born in Britain; the boy's mother credited the boy's size to her steady diet of cockles, herring, mussels, and crab claws, provided by her fishmonger husband.
Source:

News & Star

March 3, 2005 Microsoft was developing a teddy bear with a rotating head that will watch little children,
Source:

AP

March 2, 2005A toddler in Deer Park, Texas, drowned in a dirty swimming pool.
Source:

Click2Houston

March 2, 2005A toddler in Nebraska strangled himself with an automatic car window as his mother's boyfriend played soccer nearby.
Source:

The Omaha Channel

March 2, 2005In Bangladesh, four infants were on trial for looting, with bail set at fifty dollars per infant.
Source:

BBC News

March 2, 2005 Jack Nicklaus's toddler grandson drowned in a hot tub.
Source:

SFGate

March 2, 2005A toddler was swept away in the Rio Grande as his parents tried to cross into Texas from Mexico.
Source:

Houston Chronicle

March 2, 2005A toddler was lost in the Alabama woods; police, firemen, and family friends searched for him in vain. Finally, he was rescued by a three-legged dog.
Source:

NBC 13

February 24, 2005An Illinois court ruled that a man could sue his ex-lover for using his sperm, acquired via oral sex, to impregnate herself.
Source:

Chicago Sun-Times

February 23, 2005An Orangeburg, New York, man beat his toddler daughter to death for refusing a peanut-butter sandwich.
Source:

The WGAL Channel

February 22, 2005 UNICEF reported that 180 million children aged five to seventeen are forced into the “worst forms” of labor, including the sex and slave trades.
Source:

HindustanTimes.com

February 21, 2005A poll found that 57 percent of parents would not like their children to grow up to be president.
Source:

Chicago Sun-Times

February 19, 2005In Egypt, a team of thirteen doctors removed a second, “parasitic” head from a baby girl.
Source:

Reuters

February 15, 2005The Ugandan army admitted that it had recruited eight hundred child soldiers who had escaped from serving in the opposition Lord's Resistance Army.
Source:

BBC News

February 13, 2005 Alan Keyes disowned his daughter and threw her out of his house because she is a lesbian.
Source:

Washington Post

January 31, 2005succeeded in carrying out nine suicide bombings, one of which was performed by a handicapped child.
Source:

Associated Press

January 14, 2005A four-legged, anus-less, double-penised baby was born in Nigeria.
Source:

news.xinhuanet.com

January 12, 2005E! Television and Britain's BSkyB announced plans to broadcast 30-minute dramatizations of Michael Jackson's child molestation trial, based on the testimony from the previous day, in order to get around a ban on cameras in the courtroom.
Source:

Reuters

January 11, 2005The parents of a baby born on January 6, and officially named the 1.3 billionth citizen of China, turned down sponsorship deals from diaper makers. “Zhang Yichi is too young, and too many commercial activities will have negative impact on the boy's healthy growth,” said Zhang Tong, the boy's father.
Source:

China Daily

January 7, 2005Andrea Yates's conviction for murdering her five children was overturned because an expert witness didn't watch enough television.
Source:

National Public Radio

October 29, 2004New research found that it is better to be bullied for the first time as a young child than as an adolescent.
Source:

New Scientist

October 13, 2004Police in Burlington, Ontario, were searching for someone who glued shards of glass to playground equipment.
Source:

CBC News

October 2, 2004A Muslim schoolgirl in France shaved her head to protest the ban on Islamic head scarves.
Source:

Reuters

September 30, 2004In Baghdad, suicide bombs killed dozens of children who were gathering to receive candy from U.S. soldiers.
Source:

BBC

September 30, 2004 Iraqi schoolchildren were still waiting to start school, which has remained closed because of the ongoing civil war.
Source:

New York Times

September 6, 2004 Argentine researchers discovered that smoking and drinking are bad for men's semen.
Source:

Reuters

September 5, 2004 Chechen militants took more than 1,000 children and adults hostage at a school in southern Russia, though the Russian government lied at first and claimed that there were only 354 hostages; at least 338 died, half of whom were children, when security forces stormed the school.
Source:

Washington Post, Reuters

September 3, 2004The Food and Drug Administration was trying to decide whether it's ethical to give children amphetamines as part of a study.
Source:

Associated Press

August 19, 2004 Children living next to gas stations, a French study found, are four times more likely to develop leukemia.
Source:

New Scientist

July 6, 2004The British House of Lords voted to limit the right of parents to spank their children.
Source:

New York Times

June 17, 2004A remote-controlled roadside bomb in Kunduz hit a NATO vehicle, killing four people, including two schoolchildren.
Source:

New York Times

June 5, 2004Colombian police arrested a woman for drugging a pregnant mother and kidnapping her unborn child, whom she cut out of the mother's womb with a kitchen knife.
Source:

BBC

May 27, 2004and police in Philadelphia found some children playing with a bazooka.
Source:

WPVI TV Philadelphia

April 30, 2004 Child abductions were on the rise in Afghanistan, and the United Nations was having a hard time recruiting peacekeepers for its mission in Haiti.
Source:

New York Times

April 22, 2004 Suicide attacks continued; in Basra dozens of people were killed, including more than 20 children who were on their way to school.
Source:

New York Times

April 20, 2004Dozens of Chinese babies died of malnutrition after they were fed counterfeit formula.
Source:

BBC

April 17, 2004Al Jazeera broadcast a videotape showing an American soldier who was captured west of Baghdad. "I came to Iraq to liberate it," said Pfc. Keith M. Maupin. "But I didn't want to come here because I wanted to be with my son."
Source:

New York Times

April 16, 2004The FDA admitted that it refused to permit its lead expert on the subject to testify publicly that antidepressant drugs cause children to become suicidal.
Source:

New York Times

April 15, 2004 Mattel and Tek Nek Toys International recalled thousands of Batman cars and trucks after dozens of children were hurt playing with them; one child died.
Source:

New York Times

April 11, 2004 Children in Flint, Michigan, found two loaded pistols during an Easter egg hunt.
Source:

Flint Journal

April 9, 2004Florida police arrested a nine-year-old girl for stealing a black-and-white bunny rabbit named Oreo.
Source:

Associated Press

April 5, 2004A new study found that toddlers who watch too much television are more likely to have a hard time concentrating by age seven.
Source:

Seattle Post-Intelligencer

April 2, 2004President Bush signed a law making it a crime to harm a fetus while committing another crime.
Source:

Associated Press

April 2, 2004A study found that preschoolers are the fastest growing market for antidepressant drugs.
Source:

Express Scripts

April 1, 2004Two street children in Zimbabwe were arrested after they stole 100 million Zimbabwe dollars (about $23,000) and bought food, clothing, and household goods for other street children.
Source:

New York Times

March 28, 2004People in Angola were beating and torturing their own children because they believe them to be sorcerers.
Source:

Chicago Tribune

March 10, 2004A study found that teenagers who vow to remain virgins were almost as likely to catch a venereal disease as normal teens.
Source:

Guardian

March 7, 2004 Iraqis were demanding to know the whereabouts and condition of more than 10,000 men and boys (ages 11 to 75) who are being detained by American forces.
Source:

New York Times

March 5, 2004 British children found a three-headed frog with six legs.
Source:

BBC

February 17, 2004It was reported that 4,450 Roman Catholic priests have been accused of sexually abusing children since 1950.
Source:

New York Times

February 12, 2004The U.S. infant-mortality rate was up.
Source:

New York Times

February 9, 2004A two-headed baby died after doctors removed its "parasitic head."
Source:

New Scientist

February 7, 2004 Israel attempted the assassination of an Islamic Jihad leader by firing a missile at his car in Gaza City but succeeded only in killing an aide and a 14-year-old bystander.
Source:

BBC

February 5, 2004Police in Peru said that a decapitated baby boy found near Lake Titicaca, on a hill surrounded with flowers, liquor, and blood, might have been sacrificed to a pre-Colombian earth god.
Source:

Guardian

January 30, 2004The United States released three teenagers from the Guantánamo Bay prison camp.
Source:

New York Times

January 2, 2004A new study found that CAT scans might permanently damage young children's brains.
Source:

Guardian

January 2, 2004including several Air France flights between Paris and Los Angeles that were called off because of mistaken identities: six passengers, including a five-year-old and an elderly Chinese woman, had names similar to terrorism suspects.
Source:

Associated Press

December 28, 2003 Michael Jackson said that when he was a boy he slept with grown men many times, and he complained that the police had locked him in a room that had "doo doo" all over the walls.
Source:

CBS News

December 26, 2003A Swedish mother was arrested for trying to bake her five-month-old baby.
Source:

Sydney Morning Herald

December 24, 2003Princess Anne's English bull terrier Dotty mauled Pharos, Queen Elizabeth's favorite corgi, which had to be put down as a result; the princess was convicted last year under the Dangerous Dogs Act after Dotty attacked two children in a park.
Source:

BBC

December 14, 2003Lightning struck a church in Swaziland and killed a priest, five children, and three others.
Source:

News.com.au

December 10, 2003U.S. forces killed six children in Afghanistan, along with two adults, just four days after nine children were killed during another air strike. A military spokesman admitted that "such mistakes" might hurt America's reputation in the area.
Source:

Washington Post

December 7, 2003A United States airstrike near Kabul failed to kill its Taliban target ("a known terrorist") but did kill nine young children who were playing ball inside the wall of their family compound. Their hats and shoes were scattered all over a bloody field.
Source:

Los Angeles Times

December 2, 2003 Israeli soldiers killed a young boy and three Hamas members in Ramallah.
Source:

New York Times

November 10, 2003One in seven American schoolchildren was found to be at risk of heart disease.
Source:

New Scientist

November 10, 2003A suicide car bombing in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, killed 17 people, including 5 children, in a housing compound inhabited by foreign workers. Al Qaeda was blamed for the attack.
Source:

Associated Press

November 6, 2003 President Bush, surrounded by ten smiling white men in dark suits, signed a bill outlawing the rare abortion procedure known as "intact dilation and extraction." He said that America "owes its children a different and better welcome."
Source:

New York Times

October 30, 2003Shropshire lads were warned by British police to stop throwing eggs or face prosecution; parents were asked to keep a close watch on the household egg supply, and police cautioned shopkeepers to be suspicious of egg-buying children.
Source:

BBC

October 13, 2003 Israel raided the Rafah refugee camp in the Gaza Strip and left 1,240 Palestinians homeless after demolishing up to 120 houses; Israeli officials said they had destroyed three tunnels used to smuggle weapons from Egypt. Eight Palestinians were killed in the operation, including two children.
Source:

Associated Press

October 5, 2003 Islamic Jihad took responsibility for a suicide attack in Haifa, Israel, that killed at least 19 people, including several children.
Source:

Washington Post

October 1, 2003Laura Bush told the Russians that American children's books teach children to be good Americans and that her children used to enjoy acting out "Hop on Pop" by Dr. Seuss.
Source:

Reuters

September 25, 2003The recording industry let it be known that it was promoting a "stealing is bad" curriculum for the nation's schools that will include classes on the history of copyright and games such as Starving Artist, a role-playing game in which children pretend to be musicians who no longer receive royalties because their work has been copied on the Internet.
Source:

New York Times

September 11, 2003A suicide bomber struck in Kurdish Iraq, killing one child and wounding about 50 people.
Source:

New York Times

September 11, 2003A leading British fertility expert called for more research on some in vitro techniques and accused doctors of experimenting on children.
Source:

BBC

August 28, 2003In Nigeria, the young mother who was sentenced to death by stoning for having a child out of wedlock begged for mercy as she nursed her baby in court; her lawyers argued that the child was conceived while the mother was married and that under Islamic Law a baby can gestate in its mother's womb for five years.
Source:

New York Times

August 21, 2003Palestinians and Israelis were slaughtering one another again. A Hamas suicide bomber blew up a bus in Jerusalem, killing 20 people, six of whom were children, and wounding many more. One nine-year-old boy who survived was blown out of the bus and landed on some dead babies.
Source:

New York Times

August 5, 2003 Arnold Schwarzenegger appeared on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno and announced his candidacy for governor in the California recall election; other candidates include the former child-actor Gary Coleman, the pornographer Larry Flynt, a porn star named Mary Carey, and Arianna Huffington, a newspaper columnist. “This is America,” said Carey. “I am just as dignified as Arnold Schwarzenegger, and I can speak English.”
Source:

CNN.com

August 1, 2003The Vatican issued an edict calling homosexual unions "evil" and describing adoption of children by gay couples as "doing violence."
Source:

Guardian

July 11, 2003Mrs. Bush read a book about Clifford the big red dog to some HIV-infected children in Uganda; the children responded with a song: "AIDS has no mercy to the youth," they sang. "We all die young."
Source:

Reuters

July 8, 2003Americans were spritzing their offspring with "ChildCalm," a spray that purports to mollify unruly children.
Source:

Charlotte Observer

July 5, 2003A primary school in China was fining children five yuan per incident for farting in class.
Source:

Undernews

July 3, 2003A group of children in Oslo, Norway, found a human skull in their kindergarten's sandbox.
Source:

Nettavisen

June 11, 2003Frank Luntz, the Republican pollster, said that it doesn't matter whether WMD are found, "because the rationale for the war changed. Americans like a good picture. And one photograph of an Iraqi child kissing a U.S. soldier is more powerful than two months of debate on the floor of Congress."
Source:

Washington Post

June 5, 2003Elsewhere, in the West Bank, Israeli forces shot a seven-year-old Palestinian girl in the abdomen.
Source:

Guardian

June 4, 2003 Tom DeLay, the House Majority Leader, killed a Democratic attempt to extend a new tax credit to 6.5 million low-income families who were left out of President Bush's latest tax cut. "There are a lot of things that are more important than that," DeLay said. "To me, it's a little difficult to give tax relief to people that don't pay income tax."
Source:

New York Times

May 29, 2003It was discovered that families earning between $10,500 and $26,625 a year will not receive the new increase in the child tax credit.
Source:

New York Times

May 28, 2003 Schoolchildren in Akron, Ohio, will be fingerprinted so that they can be identified in school lunch lines.
Source:

Beacon Journal

May 2, 2003 UNICEF reported that since the beginning of the second Palestinian intifada 92 Israeli and 436 Palestinian children have been killed.
April 29, 2003 “On principle, we don't want the United Nations running around Iraq.” Hans Blix, the U.N. weapons inspector, pointed out that “We found as little, but with less cost.” Military officials admitted that they were holding children in the high-security prison for terrorists at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, even though they have not been accused of any offense, and said that they would be detained “until we ensure that they're no longer a threat to the United States.” A Florida mother said she accidentally stabbed her 19-year-old son in the buttocks with a 12-inch knife when he wouldn't get out of bed for work.
April 29, 2003 National SpankOut Day was marked by parents who refrained from hitting their children for a day.
April 29, 2003 Dozens of children in Pennsylvania were hospitalized after a chemical plant released a sticky cloud of glue into the air.
April 15, 2003 Mexican authorities arrested 42 police officers for selling drugs to school children.
April 15, 2003 More than 3,000 children in northern China were sick from drinking poison soy milk; three children died and several were blinded by the milk, which turned their eyes, noses, and mouths black and blue. The cause of the poisoning was unknown.
April 8, 2003 American troops opened fire on a civilian van at a checkpoint and killed seven women and children. Military officials said that the van had failed to stop when ordered to do so and that the shooting was justified.
April 1, 2003 Lt. General William Wallace, commander of Army forces in the Persian Gulf, said that “the enemy we're fighting is a bit different than the one we war gamed against.” American and British casualties were heavier than expected, and soldiers said they were having a hard time distinguishing Iraqi forces from civilians. “It's not pretty,” said one marine. “It's not surgical. You try to limit collateral damage, but they want to fight. Now it's just smash-mouth football.” The bombing of Baghdad continued; one reporter described seeing a severed hand, a pile of brains, and the remains of a mother and her three small children who were burned alive in their car after two American missiles landed in a crowded market.
April 1, 2003 Thousands of Muslims from all over the world were traveling to Iraq to fight against the American invasion; an Iraqi general claimed to have 4,000 volunteer suicide bombers from 23 Arab countries. “This is a war for oil and Zionism,” said an Egyptian student volunteer. “I want to help Iraqis, not Saddam. I know I might die. I don't want to kill people but I will if I have to, to protect people like those children with their heads missing.”
April 1, 2003 Israeli troops killed several Palestinian children.
March 25, 2003 “This military action cannot be justified in any way,” said President Vladimir Putin of Russia, and Gerhard Schroeder of Germany observed that the president's decision meant “certain death to thousands of innocent men, women, and children.” Pope John Paul II said that the invasion of Iraq “threatened the destiny of humanity.” The United States Congress quickly voted to endorse the president's declaration of war.
March 25, 2003 American networks offered few images of dead civilians, refugees, or young Iraqi children with burned faces.
March 25, 2003 Israeli schoolchildren took their gas masks to school.
March 18, 2003 Three young children were found beheaded in Brownsville, Texas, and their parents were charged with murder.
March 11, 2003 A Palestinian suicide bomber blew up a bus in Haifa, Israel, killing 15 people, including young children on their way home from school.
March 11, 2003 The United States Supreme Court ruled that it is not cruel and unusual punishment to put a man in prison for 50 years for stealing a couple of videotapes for his children.
February 25, 2003 The Nicaraguan government was trying to decide whether to force a pregnant nine-year-old girl to carry her baby to term; “I don't want to share my toys with other children,” said the girl, who was raped and has requested an abortion. I take care of my toys.”
February 18, 2003 In Colorado Springs, police fired tear gas into a crowd of protesters, even though children were in the adjacent playground.
February 4, 2003 The space shuttle Columbia broke apart while entering the upper atmosphere, scattering debris and the remains of seven astronauts over east Texas and Louisiana; three young children in Plainview, Texas, found a charred leg; a man in Hemphill found a torso and a skull along a rural highway. Fragments of the shuttle were offered for sale on eBay within a few hours.
January 28, 2003 Six men being held on immigration charges by the American government went on a hunger strike to protest their detention; several of the men said they simply wanted to be able to hug their children during visits.
January 28, 2003 An American official said that Libya's election as chairman of the United Nations Human Rights Commission was “regrettable.” Children from single-parent homes are more likely to go crazy, a Swedish study found.
January 21, 2003 Orthodox prelates in Cyprus called for a ban of the latest Harry Potter movie because it promotes wizardry and casts a demonic spell on children.
January 7, 2003 Prozac was approved for children.
December 31, 2002 Gunmen in Mogadishu, Somalia, attacked a schoolbus and killed five children.
December 17, 2002 A British vicar told a church full of young children that Santa was dead and that reindeer would burst into flames if they traveled fast enough to deliver presents to children all over the world.
December 17, 2002 The British government proposed fining the parents of children who play hooky.
December 3, 2002 People who believe that vaccines caused their children's autism were also somewhat curious.
November 19, 2002 The pope addressed Italy's parliament for the first time and urged Italians to have more children; a fugitive mobster was so moved by the pope's words that he turned himself in.
November 12, 2002 A large study of Danish children determined that the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine does not cause autism.
October 22, 2002 relief agency for Palestinian refugees, denounced the attack: “This is another case of disproportionate force being used against civilian targets, including schools full of children.” Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said that the Israeli army “has the highest level of morality in the world.” The last inhabitants of Khirbat Yanun, a Palestini