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Congo rebel group forces children
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Human Rights Watch
May 29, 2001
(New York) - The major rebel group in eastern Congo continues to
recruit children to wage war against the Congolese government, Human
Rights Watch charged in a report released today.
The report, "Reluctant Recruits: Children and Adults Forcibly
Recruited for Military Service in North Kivu," details recruitment
efforts since late 2000 by the Congolese Rally for Democracy-Goma
(RCD-Goma) and the Rwandan army troops who support it. RCD-Goma
has repeatedly pledged to demobilize its child soldiers, but has
not fulfilled these promises, the report says.
"Children are being abducted and sent to battle by the very
soldiers who are supposed to protect them," said Alison Des
Forges, Senior Adviser to the Africa Division of Human Rights
Watch. "RCD-Goma must live up to its agreements to end this
terrible practice."
As part of the 1999 Lusaka Accords, RCD-Goma agreed to halt the
use of children as soldiers. In May 2000, RCD-Goma said it would
create a commission to supervise demobilization of child soldiers,
but a year later the commission is not functioning effectively. In
April 2001, authorities of the rebel movement promised to deliver
several hundred children in training at military camps to
representatives of the United Nations. But several days later,
they reportedly allowed some 1800 new recruits between the ages of
12 and 17 to graduate from training at one of these camps. Each
child soldier received a new uniform and firearm.
In the early months of the recruitment campaign, RCD-Goma soldiers
and their Rwandan allies simply abducted children and young men
who were sent for military training and later service in the rebel
forces. Recruiters picked up children on their way to school or
church and took adults en route to work or the market. In some
cases, they raided homes, taking away anyone who might be made
into a soldier. In some communities parents refused to send their
children to school for fear of their being kidnapped. In others,
families slept outdoors to avoid raids on their houses or
organized to create an uproar when military raiders arrived in the
community so that children and young men might escape. As the use
of child soldiers attracted increasingly critical comment from
international observers, RCD-Goma moved recruiting efforts further
from urban centers, making it harder to document their activities.
They are also increasingly using promises of rewards to enroll
poor and hungry children who lacked other sources of support.
The RCD-Goma military forces pressure local civilian authorities
to deliver new recruits. To ensure their cooperation with this and
other efforts, RCD-Goma and their Rwandan backers in February 2001
transported more than 400 Congolese officials and traditional
chiefs to Rwanda for five weeks of ideological and paramilitary
training at a Rwandan military camp. "According to observers on
the spot, trucks are still rolling through Goma, transporting
children to military camps in the Congo and even to Rwanda for
training," said Des Forges. "This is bad news, both for those
children and for hopes for peace in the Congo."
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