CHILD
SOLDIERS
Some 300,000 children are currently
serving as soldiers in current
armed conflicts. Denied a childhood and often subjected to horrific
violence, children in more than 85 countries have been recruited into
government armed forces, paramilitaries, civil militia and a wide
variety of non-state armed groups. Government-backed militias and
paramilitaries are the worst culprits. Over six million child
combatants were killed or injured in the past decade. Armed forces in
Angola, Colombia, Cote d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Lebanon,
Liberia, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Sri Lanka, Sudan and Uganda have all
used child soldiers in their conflicts.
Girls have been
part of government militia or opposition fighting
forces in more than 50 countries over recent years. They have been
involved in armed conflicts from Angola to Sri Lanka, Colombia to
Uganda. In addition to the traumas of a life of armed conflict, some
female child soldiers also endure rape and other forms of sexual
violence. The stigma of sexual violence continues with a female
child soldier even when she returns to her community.
Many of the
children - some younger than 10 years old - are ‘recruited’
to join armies worldwide. Some join because there are few options for
them to make money and others are abducted or ‘forcibly recruited’. As
part of the effort to deal with the growing problem of children serving
in armed forces, the NGO working group on the Convention of the Rights
of the Child and UNICEF conducted a symposium in Cape Town, South
Africa. The result of that symposium, the Cape Town Principles and
Best Practices recommends actions to be taken by the governments
and communities in affected countries to end the violation of
children's rights. Additionally, in July 2005, the UN Security Council
unanimously passed Resolution 1612, the sixth in a series of
resolutions pertaining to children and armed conflict, which
establishes the first comprehensive monitoring and reporting system to
enforce compliance among those groups using child soldiers.
Over the years, RI has
worked with child
soldiers in Liberia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Northern Uganda,
Cote d’Ivoire and Sri Lanka. RI works closely with the Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers
to urge the respective international community to eliminate the use of
child soldiers and to meet their special needs in conflict and
post-conflict situations.