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Subject: AP: Asian Children Forced To Join Militias, View Atrocities
Received from Joyo Indonesia News
UN: Asian Children Forced To Join Militias, View Atrocities
BANGKOK, Oct. 30 (AP)--Up to one quarter of the world's 300,000 child
soldiers are serving in East Asia and the Pacific, and they are often forced to
commit and witness atrocities including murder and rape, a new UNICEF report
says.
The report, released Wednesday, details the methods used to recruit the
children, the violent acts they are forced to commit, and the consequences of
their experience - from nightmares to lack of education and illiteracy.
The report and other recent research "has clearly shown that thousands
of children are still being recruited - often by force - into state and
non-state armies in the region," a statement quoted UNICEF Executive
Director Carol Bellamy as saying.
The use of children as soldiers should be considered "an illegal and
morally reprehensible practice that has no place in civilized societies,"
she said.
UNICEF's study, titled "Adult Wars, Child Soldiers," is based on
interviews with 69 current and former child combatants from Cambodia, East
Timor, Indonesia, Myanmar, Papua New Guinea and the Philippines.
According to their own accounts, the children suffered the mistreatment of
brutal training sessions, hard labor and severe punishments, and some saw their
own families and friends killed.
Others said they had been forced to commit or witness atrocities, including
rape and murder. Nearly all those interviewed were given weapons and served in
combat. Their average recruitment age was 13 years.
One of the child soldiers, identified only as Vasco, said he joined a militia
in East Timor for eight months when he was 14.
"When the militia came, my parents were very afraid and said to me, 'If
the militia ask you to do anything, just do it or they will kill us,'" the
UNICEF report quoted Vasco saying.
"They ordered us to rape," he said. "They beat me with a piece
of wood every day...I wake up still from bad dreams. I am still constantly
afraid."
The youngest of 67 boys and two girls interviewed was a boy from Myanmar who
said he was 7 when he was recruited by government soldiers who promised him food
and candy. Another boy from Myanmar, who joined the military at age 9, said he
was dragged from his house because he was considered an adult.
"It is time for all parties to acknowledge this and work together...to
bring an end to this profound abuse of children's rights," Bellamy said.
The UNICEF study calls for demobilizing all child soldiers; providing support
for their reintegration into society, especially through education and
vocational training; and providing appropriate psychological and social care and
support for former combatants.
[Full report Adult Wars, Child Soldiers: Voices of Children Involved in Armed
Conflict in the East Asia and Pacific Region is avaiable at http://www.reliefweb.int/library/documents/2002/unicef-childsoldiersasia.pdf]
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