Child Exploitation
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Most people have no idea how large the problem truly is.
soldiers
I’ve seen people get their hands cut off, a ten-year-old girl raped and then die, and so
many men and women burned alive . . . So many times I just cried inside my heart because
I didn’t dare cry out loud.
fourteen-year-old girl, abducted in January 1999 by the
Revolutionary United Front, a rebel group in Sierra Leone
In dozens of countries around the world, children have become direct participants in war.
Denied a childhood and often subjected to horrific violence, some 300,000 children are
serving as soldiers in current armed conflicts. These young combatants participate in all
aspects of contemporary warfare. They wield AK-47s and M-16s on the front lines of
combat, serve as human mine detectors, participate in suicide missions, carry supplies,
and act as spies, messengers or lookouts.
Physically vulnerable and easily intimidated, children typically make obedient soldiers.
Many are abducted or recruited by force, and often compelled to follow orders under threat
of death. Others join armed groups out of desperation. As society breaks down during
conflict, leaving children no access to school, driving them from their homes, or separating
them from family members, many children perceive armed groups as their best chance for
survival. Others seek escape from poverty or join military forces to avenge family members
who have been killed.

Child soldiers are being used in more than thirty countries around the world. Human Rights
Watch has interviewed child soldiers from countries including Angola, Colombia, Lebanon,
Liberia, Sierra Leone, Sudan and Uganda. In Sierra Leone, thousands of children
abducted by rebel forces witnessed and participated in horrible atrocities against civilians,
including beheadings, amputations, rape, and burning people alive. Children forced to take
part in atrocities were often given drugs to overcome their fear or reluctance to fight.

In Colombia, tens of thousands of children have been used as soldiers by all sides to the
country’s ongoing bloody conflict. Government-backed paramilitaries recruit children as
young as eight, while guerrilla forces use children to collect intelligence, make and deploy
mines, and serve as advance troops in ambush attacks.

In southern Lebanon, boys as young as twelve years of age have been subject to forced
conscription by the South Lebanon Army (SLA), an Israeli auxiliary militia. When men and
boys refuse to serve, flee the region to avoid conscription, or desert the SLA forces, their
entire families may be expelled from the occupied zone.

Girls are also used as soldiers in many parts of the world. In addition to combat duties, girls
are subject to sexual abuse and may be taken as “wives” by rebel leaders in Angola, Sierra
Leone and Uganda. In Northern Uganda, Human Rights Watch interviewed girls who had
been impregnated by rebel commanders, and then forced to strap their babies on their
backs and take up arms against Ugandan security forces.

Under the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the definition of a child is any person
under the age of eighteen, unless under the law applicable to the child majority is attained
earlier. However, article 38, governing children and armed conflict, uses fifteen as the
minimum age for recruitment and participation in hostilities. This low standard of protection
is a glaring and troubling anomaly among the convention’s other strong provisions.

Several years after the convention’s adoption, a U.N. working group was created to draft an
optional protocol to the convention, that would raise the minimum age for recruitment and
participation in hostilities to eighteen. However, as the 10th anniversary of the convention’s
adoption arrives, agreement on the optional protocol still has not been reached, largely
because of opposition by governments who continue to recruit minors.

The United States has emerged as the most vigorous opponent of establishing eighteen as
the minimum age for military service, even though fewer than 3,000 members of its 1.3
million active duty force are minors. Other Western countries also recruit under-18's, most
notably the United Kingdom, where approximately forty percent of its military forces joined
when they were just sixteen or seventeen years of age.

In 1996, a U.N. study on the impact of armed conflict on children, conducted by Graça
Machel of Mozambique, stressed the urgent need to stop the use of child soldiers and
recommended the speedy conclusion of the optional protocol. The report raised
international concern about the use of child soldiers and prompted the appointment of a
special representative to the secretary general on children and armed conflict in 1997.
That representative, Olara Otunnu, has secured commitments not to recruit children from
several parties involved in armed conflict; monitoring and enforcement of these
commitments, however, has been difficult.

Efforts to stop the use of child soldiers continue to grow. In 1998, the recruitment of
children under the age of fifteen and their use in hostilities was identified as a war crime in
the statute of the International Criminal Court. Once established, the court will have
jurisdiction to prosecute those responsible for the use of child soldiers. The use of children
as soldiers has also been recognized as a child labor issue. A new international treaty
banning the worst forms of child labor, adopted in June of 1999 by the International Labour
Organization, prohibits the forced recruitment of children for use in armed conflicts.

In 1998, the Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers was set up in order to campaign for
a strong optional protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child which would prohibit
any recruitment or use of children under the age of eighteen in armed conflict. Formed by
six international nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), the coalition now works with
national campaigns in more than thirty countries around the world, mobilizing political will
and public pressure for an end to the use of children as soldiers. Its activities have
included a series of high profile regional conferences focused on the use of children as
soldiers in Africa, Latin America, and Europe.

Despite this growing momentum, efforts to stop the use of child soldiers have not yet
reached fruition. The recruitment of child soldiers continues around the world, those
responsible for their recruitment escape justice, and key governments continue to resist
efforts to establish and enforce the prohibitions necessary to end the use of children as
soldiers.