Use of child soldier continues unabated
Children
continued to be used as soldiers, sexual slaves, labourers, porters
and spies throughout 2003 in both newly-erupting and longstanding conflicts,
according to a report released by the Coalition to Stop the Use of Child
Soldiers. The report details evidence of governments and armed groups
recruiting and using child soldiers in numerous conflicts worldwide.
The Coalition calls for action by the UN Security Council to insist
upon and enforce an end to child recruitment.
The
50-page report, "Child Soldier Use 2003", is intended to help
the Security Council formulate concrete solutions during its annual
debate on children and armed conflict. The Coalition report identifies
18 different countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Middle
East where child soldier issues remain part of the gross abuse of human
rights in an armed conflict or its aftermath.
The
Coalition's report provides evidence that in many conflicts, such as
Coted'Ivoire, parts of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Liberia,
a massive increase in recruitment occurred during 2003. Horrifying reports
emerged from the DRC of children being raped and tortured, as well as
forced to commit atrocities against civilians. Abductions of children
in northern Uganda by the Lord's Resistance Army are at the highest
point of the conflict's 17-year history. Thousands of children in northern
Uganda continue to flee their homes at night to avoid being abducted
into brutal combat and servitude.
In
Myanmar there was little if any progress in ending child soldiering,
with an estimated 70,000 children in the government armed forces. Exiled
children told of being abducted by government forces and taken to military
camps where they were subject to beatings, forced labour and combat.
Recent reports from Colombia reveal that the number of children used
by armed groups may have increased to around 11,000 in recent years,
with children as young as 12 trained and deployed to use explosives
and weapons. In Sri Lanka the forced conscription of children by the
armed opposition Tamil Tigers of Eelam (LTTE) continues, despite LTTE
pledges to demobilise children from their ranks.
The
Coalition recommends that Security Council members should:
Make
sure there is an annual updated list of all parties to armed conflict
that recruit or use child soldiers;
Follow
up on this list by asking those using child soldiers to provide within
90 days information on steps they are taking to end recruitment and
use of child soldiers;
Designate
a UN representative to start talks with those using child soldiers,
and to assist them in developing action plans with them to end such
practices;
Verify
whether armed groups and forces are implementing such action plans;
End
weapons flows, particularly small arms, to those recruiting and using
children; and
Use
other means to enforce an international ban on child soldiering, such
as travel restrictions on leaders using children in their armies, banning
them from attending international events and organisations, ending military
assistance to their governments or groups, and restricting the flow
of financial resources to the parties concerned.
Sources:
Amnesty International.