Warlords keep huge army of child soldiers in slavery
UNITED NATIONS: More than 11,000 child soldiers were freed
from military slavery last year, but the United Nations believes hundreds of
thousands around the world remain at the mercy of warlords like Thomas Lubanga.
The 14-year jail term ordered against Lubanga by the
International Criminal Court on Tuesday is a “historic” signal, according to
Radhika Coomaraswamy, who ends a six-year term this month as UN special
representative on children in conflict.
The crime of recruiting and using children as soldiers “is
now written in stone, nobody can say they are unaware of it,” Coomaraswamy told
AFP in an interview.
Governments are starting to get the message. Only Lubanga's
native Democratic Republic of Congo and Sudan are holding up a UN target to rid
all government armies around the world of child soldiers by 2015.
The UN believes hundreds of thousands of children are forced
to fight at gunpoint are by the likes of the Taliban in Afghanistan, notorious
Congo warlord Bosco Ntaganda, the Shebab in Somalia, Ansar Dine in Mali and
other terror groups and private armies around the world.
Under-aged combatants have existed for time immemorial.
Alexander the Great trained as a child soldier, and desperate armies in both
world wars enlisted and coerced youth fighters. But the practice has only been
on the world “radar” for the past 20 years, said Coomaraswamy.
“Mr Lubanga is the classic case from the Great African wars
of the 1990s which was basically child abduction, the use of drugs, children
used as soldiers, so he is as bad as they come,” the UN official said.
In civil wars around the world, drugs have been used to turn
children against their families. Young girls are turned into sex slaves, or
soldiers, or both.
Coomaraswamy attributes her successes in fighting the
scourge to the use of UN Security Council threats of sanctions against
unwilling states and naming and shaming in annual lists.
On top of the thousands of child soldiers released last
year, 19 “action plans” have been signed with governments and groups, the UN
representative said. Myanmar signed a deal after five years of talks. Thousands
of children are believed to be in the government army and ethnic militias.
The Somali government signed an accord this month to rid its
ranks of troops aged under 18. Chad was another deal that took some tough
talking.
Coomaraswamy is confident that DR Congo and Sudan will
follow. “Now I think we are on track that by 2015 we will no longer have any
national army anywhere in the world that recruits children.” Governments can
generally be trusted to keep their word once they sign. “They don't like to be
on any Security Council list or with the threat of sanctions hanging over
them,” the UN envoy said.
Uganda was on the UN blacklist, but signed an action plan in
2007. “Now they have been delisted and are at the forefront of fighting the
LRA,” said Coomaraswamy. Lord's Resistance Army chief Joseph Kony, like
Ntaganda in DR Congo, is wanted by the ICC.
With groups like the Taliban and Shebab, which are “just
very contemptuous of the international community” and refuse to negotiate, the
only response is public appeals and mobilizing local populations against the
groups, Coomaraswamy said.
Community action in Afghanistan has brought down the number
of attacks on schools.
AFP
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