Children in Armed Conflict



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Children in Armed Conflict This paper is designed to give a brief overview of recent Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration programs for child soldiers. Michael Odeh is the Senior Research Assistant at Youth Advocate Program International in Washington, D.C. Colin Sullivan is a Senior Program Assistant at YAP International. The authors would like to thank Erin Pfoutz, Senior International Legal Assistant at YAP International, for her additional research. Recent Developments in International Rehabilitation of Child Soldiers by Michael Odeh and Colin Sullivan The United Nations defines a child soldier as any person under 18 years of age who is part of any kind of regular or irregular armed force or armed group [acting] in any capacity, including but not limited to cooks, porters, messengers and anyone accompanying such groups. 1 The most widely accepted estimate is that there are currently 300,000 child soldiers worldwide. 2 The recruitment of child soldiers occurs all around the world, yet their use is publicly sanctioned at varying degrees of acceptability. For instance, more developed countries allow persons under 18 with parental consent to voluntarily join government forces, but only as trainees or cadets performing in limited capacities. Small numbers of youths (under 18) are active in forces associated with the United States, France, Germany, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada. 3 Youth forces in these developed countries are often characterized as career development programs, and the utilization of youth forces for combat purposes are limited. The use of child soldiers becomes especially problematic when children are abducted or coerced into joining government, paramilitary or rebel forces, as happens in many third world and developing countries. Children are easy to recruit because of their vulnerability and naïveté, but are often neglected once the www.yapi.org 1 UNICEF. Who is a child soldier? http://www.unicef.org/emerg/index_childsoldiers.html 2 Human Rights Watch. http://hrw.org/campaigns/crp/index.htm 3 Data provided by Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers, Global Report 2004 ---------------------------------------------------------------- Youth Advocate Program International Resource Paper 1

conflict is over or when they leave the group. International groups have advocated for the rehabilitation of child soldiers, but children are often overlooked during official implementation. Disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration (DDR) intervention programs are intended to bring security and stability to a region after a conflict. The three phases of DDR programs are sequentially imperative. 4 First, Disarmament requires that combatants are stripped of their weapons, and DDR programs often utilize a trade-in system, such as weapons for cash. Demobilization constitutes the assembly and registration of ex-combatants, orienting former soldiers on the value of the DDR program, and transporting ex-combatants to desired locations at a time that is in-sync with civilian life, such as crop and school cycles. Finally, reintegration ensures social and economic assimilation through the personal empowerment of and financial incentives to excombatants. Although child soldiers have much to benefit from appropriate DDR programs, they are frequently disregarded in the planning stages of DDR programs and excluded from DDR implementation. These programs predominantly focus on adult male soldiers, rarely include women, and often exclude children. 5 The United Nation s Security Council recognizes the importance of DDR programs for child soldiers and war-affected children, 6 but even with the help of international aid the responsibility and actual implementation of DDR programs ultimately lies with the government of the afflicted country. 7 The U.N. has taken many steps to protect the rights of children affected by armed conflict. To date, 72 nations have ratified the Optional Protocol 8 to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on children involved in armed 4 Fusato, M. (2003). Disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration of ex-combatants. www.beyondintractability.org/m/demobilization.jsp 5 Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers. http://www.childsoldiers.org/cs/childsoldiers.nsf/displaysmessage/about_the_csc 6 Statement of the President of the Security Council (March 23, 2000). http://www.un.int/usa/spst0010.htm 7 Becker, J. (2004). Human Rights Watch World Report 2004: Children as weapons of war. http://www.hrw.org/wr2k4/11.htm 8 Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (June, 2004). Status of Ratifications of the Principal International Human Rights Treaties. http://www.unhchr.ch/pdf/report.pdf conflict, a document that establishes 18 as the minimum age of conscription into the military (Article 2) and requires that members of the military under age 18 be kept out of hostilities by all feasible measures (Article 1). This Protocol also requires governments to provide programs for the psychological recovery and social reintegration of former child soldiers, where necessary (Article 6). Unfortunately, ensuring the successful reintegration of former child combatants is rife with complexities. Children who have known only violence are likely to resort to violence when solving personal problems. Those who have been forced to commit atrocities sometimes return to their homes only to be shunned and stigmatized by their own communities. Wars often uproot families, driving entire populations to seek shelter in refugee camps. These camps strain local resources, putting education and jobs out of reach for many refugee children and adults. In these conditions, with a shortage of food and no meaningful activities for children, armed groups find children in refugee camps to be easy recruits. Some programs, therefore, target the situation of children in refugee camps to prevent children from recruitment, and to advance the process of rejoining society. For example, the International Rescue Committee has developed structures in Indonesia to supplement the local school system in order to provide for the influx of the displaced population. 9 The following is a brief survey of several countries dealing with the problems of conflict, child soldiers, and DDR programs. The programs discussed each deal with a different step in the process of reconstruction after war. It is clear that DDR is a long and complicated process, but one that brings about peace and hope for the future, especially for child soldiers. 9 The International Rescue Committee http://www.theirc.org/index.cfm/wwwid/1665/programs/show/topicid/ 134 ---------------------------------------------------------------- Youth Advocate Program International Resource Paper 2

Liberia Since 1980, Liberia has seen cycles of civil war and unstable governments, creating poverty and refugees. As a result, many children have been recruited to fight for government and opposition forces. In 2004, the UN warned that Liberian DDR programs were in funding jeopardy and that camps were overstretched, potentially preventing 21,000 former child soldiers from receiving treatment. Sudan Since 1983, the Southern People's Liberation Army has used child soldiers in a civil conflict with the Sudanese government. In March 2001, over 2,500 child soldiers were released. They spent four months in U.N. camps receiving education, and medical and psychological care. UNICEF estimates that another 9,000 child soldiers remain in Sudan. AFRICA Uganda Since 1986, 15,000 children have been abducted by the Lord s Resistance Army, an opposition group to the Ugandan government. Operation Iron Fist was launched by the Ugandan government in an effort to abolish the LRA; however, the policy merely pushed the LRA underground and in doing so, misplaced thousands of Ugandans. In 2003, the International Rescue Committee was able to successfully reunite over 1,500 former child soldiers with their families. Sierra Leone 10,000 children have been known to have fought in Sierra Leonean armed forces. In the 1990 s the child armies established a notorious reputation for brutality. In the summer of 2001, the Revolutionary United Front rebels released 600 child soldiers. The International Rescue Committee provided education, skills training, and psychosocial care to 100 of them. In 2002, a Sierra Leonean entrepreneur began a program to teach former child soldiers computer and programming skills. Democratic Republic of the Congo Over 6,000 children fight in government and opposition forces around the Congo. In 2001, the U.S. Department of Labor funded $310,000 of an International Labor Organization program to collect vital information on child soldiers in Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi, and Rwanda. Rwanda In early 2001, the Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA) clashed with fighters from the neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo. After two weeks of combat, the RPA captured close to 700 child soldiers. Since August 2001, a UNICEF program has provided basic care and rehabilitation services for over 300 children, some as young as 10 years old. Angola Over 7,000 children, including those from neighboring Namibia, were active soldiers in Angolan armed forces until the fighting ended in 2002. In 2003, the Angolan government, UNICEF, and community partners established a framework to provide former child soldiers with physical rehabilitation, psychological recovery, and social reintegration. The government has made plans to build thousands of new classrooms and has enacted goals to increase school attendance by 2015. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Youth Advocate Program International Resource Paper 3

Israel / Palestine In Palestine s occupied territories, generations of children have been raised in areas of intense conflict. SOS Children, a charity organization for orphan and abandoned children, launched programs in the West Bank to help children affected by the conflict. They have made psychological support available to children in the region, treating about 2,500 children a year, as well as providing homes and primary schooling. Afghanistan For decades, Afghani children have been known to fight with all forms of armed militias, but exact numbers remain unknown. UNICEF helped refurbish 200 schools, and in March 2002, over 1.5 million children enrolled for school. In early February 2004, UNICEF implemented a new reintegration program for 2,000 former child soldiers, and has plans for 3,000 more by the year s end. The program will create a comprehensive care plan and information database, including psychological and medical treatment, for each soldier. UNICEF estimates a total of 8,000 child soldiers currently in Afghanistan. MIDDLE EAST Iraq Under the tyrannical rule of Saddam Hussein, children aged 10-15 underwent mandatory three-week military training camps. USAID and other partners have undertaken the renovation of Iraq s education facilities while forming an Iraqi government that will be more protective of children s rights. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Youth Advocate Program International Resource Paper 4

ASIA Sri Lanka In October 2003, UNICEF opened the first of three transit centers, where child soldiers released from the notorious rebel group, Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, can stay for up to three months and receive educational and vocational training before they are to be reunited with their families. Bangladesh In 1999, it was reported that 3,374 recruits in the government s armed forces had not yet reached 18 years of age. It is difficult to obtain accurate and current information on the use of children in either government armed forces or armed opposition groups. It may be that because the government denies its use of child soldiers, it has neglected to implement any DDR programs for those children that are affected by armed conflict. Myanmar (Burma) As many as 70,000 children are involved in government and opposition armed forces despite national laws protecting children s rights and banning forcible conscription. More than 700 soldiers have been released since 2002 thanks to a program that verified soldiers and prevented forced recruitment. The government has disbanded training camps used to hold street children and orphans until reaching recruitment age. These children were offered the opportunity to attend non-military training schools when the recruitment program was discontinued in 2000. The numbers of children participating in this program were not available. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Youth Advocate Program International Resource Paper 5

Colombia Human Rights Watch conservatively estimates that over 11,000 children are fighting with guerilla armies like the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia- People s Army, the Camilist Union-National Liberation Army, and United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia. While in 1999, the Colombian government outlawed and prosecuted the recruitment of children in the military, in 2002, the government sought to expand the military by almost 20,000 troops. The plan called for the recruitment of peasant soldiers, or in other words, poor children who were lured by economic incentives to join the violent conflict. SOUTH AMERICA Paraguay Though laws are in place to protect children from forcible recruitment by the government, reports indicate that children as young as 12 have been conscripted to serve in the armed forces. Military recruiters have been accused of aiding underage recruits in seeking false identification documents. In 2000, 10,400 children were estimated to be involved in government forces. There has been an alarming rate of injury and death among young conscripts. In 2002 Paraguay ratified the UN Optional Protocol on child soldiers. Brazil In Rio de Janeiro, children are surrounded by violent drug-related gangs. The death rate due to firearms is comparable to that of a nation at war. Although there are many programs in the area that treat at risk children, to terminate the cycle of what has been called Organized Armed Violence, Brazilian children may benefit from a DDR program that emphasized enhanced education and access to profitable job markets. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Youth Advocate Program International Resource Paper 6

Country References Maps are courtesy of GraphicMaps.com and WorldAtlas.com Child soldier data for all countries provided by Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers, Global Report 2001and 2004. Angola IRIN (March 10, 2003). ANGOLA: Rehabilitation of child soldiers critical, UNICEF www.irinnews.org/report.asp?reportid=32737&selectregion=southern_africa& SelectCountry=ANGOLA IRIN (September 28, 2004). ANGOLA: Children ravaged by war w.irinnews.org/report.asp?reportid=43401&selectregion=southern_africa&selectcountry=angola Afghanistan U.N. Children s Fund, UNICEF (2004 February 8). 2,000 former Afghan child soldiers to be demobilized and rehabilitated. http://www.reliefweb.int/w/rwb.nsf/0/ac29408ead59c933c1256e370033cce4?opendocument Bangladesh Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers. Child Soldiers Global Report 2004. http://www.childsoldiers.org/document_get.php?id=845 Brazil Dowdney, L. (2003) Children of the Drug Trade, Rio de Janeiro: 7Letras. http://www.coav.org.br/publique/media/livroluke_eng.pdf Colombia Human Rights Watch (September 2003). You ll learn not to cry: Child combatants in Colombia. Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers (November 20, 2003). Children used as soldiers in current conflicts. http://www.reliefweb.int/w/rwb.nsf/0/13a2cda8955d9bcfc1256de40042b96f?opendocument Congo U.S. Department of Labor International Conference Children in the Crossfire: Prevention and Rehabilitation of Child Soldiers (May 2003). http://www.dol.gov/ilab/programs/iclp/childsoldiers/factsheet.htm Iraq Iraq Country Report on Human Rights Practices 2003, U.S. Department of States http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2003/27928.htm Iraq and Afghanistan: Accomplishments and Next Steps, Andrew S. Natsios Testimony before House Appropriations Foreign Operations Subcommittee. http://www.state.gov/p/sa/rls/rm/24852.htm Israel / Palestine SOS Children. Children in Palestine, http://www.child-soldier.org/palestine.htm Liberia Amnesty International UK (May 17, 2004). Liberia: Rehabilitation of 21,000 child soldiers in danger of failing http://www.amnesty.org.uk/news/press/15360.shtml PBS Online Newshour (October 23, 2003) Liberia s Uneasy Peace http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/africa/liberia/ Gray, J. M. (April 12, 2004). The Resumption of the Disarmament, Demobilization, Rehabilitation and Reintegration Process. The Perspective, Atlanta, GA. Myanmar (Burma) Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers. Child Soldiers Global Report 2004 http://www.childsoldiers.org/document_get.php?id=860; My Gun was as Tall as Me, HRW, 2002. Paraguay Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers. Child Soldiers Global Report 2004. http://www.childsoldiers.org/document_get.php?id=845 Rwanda UNICEF (August 20, 2001). Hundreds of ex-child soldiers begin rehabilitation in Rwanda http://www.unicef.org/newsline/01pr69.htm Sierra Leone International Rescue Committee (June 1, 2001). The IRC Prepares to Receive Child Soldiers Freed by Sierra Leone Rebels http://www.theirc.org/index.cfm/wwwid/1001 Hermida, A. (March 25, 2002). Child soldiers swap guns for PCs. BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/1886248.stm Sri Lanka UNICEF (October 3, 2003). UNICEF opens transit centre for child soldiers freed by LTTE http://www.unicef.org/publications/media_14891.html Sudan Stohl, R. (2001 March 1). Child Soldiers Released in Sudan, Still no U.S. Action. Center for Defense Information http://www.cdi.org/friendlyversion/printversion.cfm?documentid=577 Uganda International Rescue Committee (March 17, 2004). Children Targeted in Uganda s Horrific, Overlooked War http://www.theirc.org/index.cfm/wwwid/1957 Youth Advocate Program International is a non-profit, 501(c)(3) organization. This paper may be reproduced for non-commercial purposes only, yet may not be changed. For more information, contact YAP International at 4545 42 nd Street, NW, Suite 209, Washington, DC 20016; tel: 202/244-1986; email: yapi@yapi.org; web: www.yapi.org ---------------------------------------------------------------- Youth Advocate Program International Resource Paper 7