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Coalition
To Stop The Use Of Child Soldiers
July
11, 2000
"Everyone
was dying. You saw the legs or hands of your friends lying in front
of you. It was so horrifying, you couldn't make sense of it. It was
hell! Boys lay on the ground for three or four days without being
buried. We were fighting around their corpses."
- Rashid,
an Ethiopian high school student who fought on the Badme front in
1999.
"It
was very bad. They put all the 15 and 16 year olds in the front
line while the army retreated. I was with 40 other kids. My friends
were lying all over the place like stones. I was fighting for 24
hours. When I saw that only three of my friends were alive, I ran
back."
- Mohammed,
a 17 year old Ethiopian soldier forcibly recruited at age 15, describing
his experience in battle in early 1999
Child
soldiers should be demobilised immediately as part of peace moves
between Ethiopia and Eritrea, the Coalition to Stop the Use of Child
Soldiers urged today.
In
a special appeal, the international NGO coalition appealed to the
governments of Ethiopia and Eritrea to ensure that children take
no further part in this armed conflict by ending the military recruitment
of children, demobilising those already serving in their ranks and
releasing into safety child prisoners of war.
"This
war has been fought in the fashion of the First World War with children
literally being used as cannon fodder," said Rory Mungoven, London-
based coordinator of the Coalition.
"Young
Ethiopian recruits tell harrowing stories of being marched over
minefields to clear a path for the regular army. Some who returned
alive were ill-treated or charged with desertion; others who tried
to escape were shot."
Under
Ethiopian law, there is no compulsory military service and the minimum
age for recruitment into the armed forces is 18 years. The Ethiopian
Government has in Over the past two years, however, there have been
credible reports that thousands of teenage boys have been forcibly
recruited into the Ethiopian army, particularly during the build-
up to the major offensive launched by Ethiopia in May 2000. The
recruitment drive reportedly focused on Oromos and Somalis, ethnic
groups that have traditionally been sources of political opposition
to the government.the past vehemently denied these claims.
In
Eritrea, military service is obligatory for all Eritrean citizens
between the age of 18 and 40. This lasts for 18 months, including
six months of training and induction. It is widely acknowledged
that children were used as soldiers by Eritrea during the war of
independence against Ethiopia, though it is not clear whether this
practice has continued in the most recent conflict. The lack of
systematic birth registration makes it impossible to know whether
the minimum age of recruitment is being respected in practice and
the intensive fighting of recent months has required increased military
mobilisation. In April 1999, Ethiopian officials circulated a list
of Eritrean prisoners of war under 18 years of age, the youngest
being 15.
"The
current ceasefire presents an opportunity to demobilise child soldiers
on both sides and ensure no more children are subjected to this
abuse," Mr. Mungoven said. "As a signal of their commitment, both
governments should sign and ratify the new Optional Protocol to
the Convention on the Rights of the Child which prohibits the use
of children under 18 as soldiers."
The
Coalition calls on the United Nations, the Organisation of African
Unity and donor governments to ensure that child soldiers are explicitly
addressed in any peace agreement and peacekeeping mission, and to
support programs for their demobilisation, rehabilitation and reintegration
into society.
"In
August last year, the UN Security Council recognised the importance
of dealing with the child soldiers problem in peace building efforts.
Now is a golden opportunity to put that commitment into practice
? and to save a generation of children from this kind of abuse."
Background
Ethiopia
and Eritrea have been fighting over a disputed demarcation of their
common border since May 1998. In mid-June, after months of intense
fighting, in which tens of thousands of soldiers died and more than
a million civilians were displaced, a breakthrough was achieved
in negotiations, brokered by the Organisation of African Unity with
the support of the United Nations. A high level team will visit
Ethiopia and Eritrea in the coming weeks, with a view to the UN
Secretary General making recommendations on a peacekeeping mission
to the UN Security Council later in July.
The
Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers
The
Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers was formed in May 1998
by leading non-governmental organisations to seek to end the military
recruitment and participation in armed conflict of all children
under 18 years of age. Its steering committee members currently
include Amnesty International, Defence for Children International,
Human Rights Watch, Jesuit Refugee Service, Quaker United Nations
Office - Geneva, Rädda Barnen for the International Save the Children
Alliance, Terre des Hommes and World Vision International and several
regional NGOs from Latin America, Africa and Asia.
Information
on child soldiers and the Coalition's activities can be found on
our website: www.child-soldiers.org
For
a full briefing paper on Ethiopia and Eritrea or to arrange interviews,
please call: London: Rory Mungoven, 44 780 877 1379 New York: Jo
Becker, 1 212 216 1236 - COALITION TO STOP The USE OF CHILD SOLDIERS,
PO BOX 22696, LONDON N4 3ZJ. UK. TEL: (44)(0) 20 7274 0230
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