"They went through trauma, because some of them also saw others being sexually exploited," the charity's CEO Gugu Xaba tells the BBC.
Fans of viral Labubu dolls have reacted angrily online after its maker pulled the toys from all UK stores following reports of customers fighting over them.Pop Mart, which makes the monster bag charms, told the BBC it had paused selling them in all 16 of its shops until June to "prevent any potential safety issues".
Labubu fan Victoria Calvert said she witnessed chaos in the Stratford store in London. "It was just getting ridiculous to be in that situation where people were fighting and shouting and you felt scared."The soft toys became a TikTok trend after being worn by celebrities like Rihanna and Dua Lipa. Now some retail experts are warning the stop on stock will only heighten demand.Labubu is a quirky monster character created by Hong Kong-born artist Kasing Lung, and popularised through a collaboration with toy store Pop Mart.
Since gaining celebrity status they've gone viral as a fashion accessory.In the UK, prices can range from £13.50 to £50, with rare editions going for hundreds of pounds on resale sites such as Vinted and eBay.
Pop Mart said it was working on a fairer system for when the toys return to its shelves.
But fans on social media were not happy at the decision to pull the dolls.A bomb attack on a school bus in Pakistan's Balochistan region has killed at least five people and injured dozens.
The bus was carrying around 40 school children when it exploded at about 07:40 local time (02:40 GMT) just outside the remote town of Khuzdar, police told the BBC.Three of the five people killed are children, police said. Pictures circulating on social media show the charred wreckage of a large bus, with backpacks scattered around it.
No group has claimed responsibility for the incident so far, but Balochistan, a turbulent province in the country's south west, has been plagued by a long-standing insurgency and human rights violations.Pakistan's Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi condemned the incident as "sheer barbarism", calling the attackers "beasts who target children" in an attempt to destabilise the country.