You are in: Home :: News Story |
NEWS STORY
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
DR Congo: Army should stop use of child soldiers |
 |
Human Rights Watch
April 19, 2007
(Brussels). The Congolese government should immediately stop
former rebel warlords now commissioned as national army officers
from recruiting and using child soldiers in army brigades deployed
in North Kivu province, Human Rights Watch said today.
Human Rights Watch also called upon the Rwandan government to
prevent these officials and their agents from continuing to
recruit children in Rwanda to serve in the Congolese army’s North
Kivu brigades.
“The head of the Congolese military in January ordered the
North Kivu brigades to stop recruiting and using children
soldiers,” said Alison Des Forges, senior advisor to Human Rights
Watch’s Africa division. “Former rebel warlords now serving as
army officers have failed to follow this order, and children are
still on the front lines shooting and being shot at.”
Despite the order by chief of staff of the armed forces, Maj.
Gen. Kisempia Sungilanga Lombe, 300 to 500 children, some as young
as 13, currently serve in newly formed army brigades, according to
international and local child protection workers. The brigades are
deploying these children in military operations against local
armed groups, including the Mai Mai and the Forces for the
Democratic Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR, or Forces démocratiques de
libération du Rwanda), which are fighting the Rwandan government.
Many of the children are Congolese Tutsi who were originally under
the command of former rebel leader Gen. Laurent Nkunda.
Under a deal meant to end combat between the national army and
Nkunda’s forces, rebel combatants were to be integrated into the
national army by a process called “mixage.” Beginning in January,
army brigade commanders were supposed to identify and hand
children over to agencies responsible for their rehabilitation,
but several have refused to do so. The commanders say they must
maintain sufficient soldiers to protect Tutsi living in North Kivu
and enable the return of thousands of Congolese Tutsi refugees
living in camps in Rwanda.
In one case at the North Kivu military camp at Kitchanga on
March 22, brigade commander Col. Sultani Makenga tried to forcibly
remove eight children from the vehicle of child protection
workers. He personally dragged six from the vehicle under protest
and beat two of the children who refused. Makenga also called the
child protection workers “dogs,” and threatened to beat them as
well. Three of the children later found refuge with the United
Nations peacekeepers, but three are still missing.
According to child protection workers, children are still being
recruited for the North Kivu brigades within the Congo and also
from across the border in Rwanda. In one case, the Association of
Young Congolese Refugees (Association des jeunes réfugiés
congolais), active in the Congolese refugee camps in Rwanda since
2005, recruited two boys, aged 14 and 16, from one of the camps,
along with nine other children and 17 adults. On January 18, the
two boys were taken from Rwanda to serve in one of the Congolese
army’s North Kivu brigades, but were able to escape during the
burial of two adult recruits who died on the journey.
Other armed groups active in North Kivu are known to be using
child soldiers. One of the local armed groups known as Mai Mai
engaged in a skirmish with Congolese army brigades in February. On
February 19, six boys aged 14 to 17 fled this Mai Mai group and
made their way to United Nations peacekeepers based in Kiwandja.
At a news conference on April 11, the UN Mission in DR Congo (MONUC,
or Mission de l’ONU en RD Congo) said that only 37 of 267 children
whom they had identified in the North Kivu brigades had been
demobilized. MONUC urged the brigade commanders to respect
national and international law and to follow the orders of Maj.
Gen. Kisempia Sungilanga Lombe, who ordered the children to be
released.
Since November 2001, DR Congo has been a party to the Optional
Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the
involvement of children in armed conflict, which sets 18 as the
minimum age for participation in armed conflict. The country is
also party to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal
Court, which defines as war crimes both the recruitment of
children under the age of 15 into military forces and the use of
children to participate actively in hostilities.
In September, DR Congo was the first country to be considered
by the UN Security Council’s new monitoring and reporting
mechanism on children in armed conflict, which envisages strong
measures against those responsible for child recruitment. The
Security Council’s Working Group on Children and Armed Conflict
called on the government to take appropriate legal action against
members of the Congolese army accused of grave crimes against
children and reiterated the responsibility of MONUC to aid the
government in apprehending and bringing to justice those
responsible for recruiting and using child soldiers.
Despite this new system, UN peacekeeping officials in Congo
have privately raised concern at their inability to oblige army
brigade commanders to release the children.
Human Rights Watch called on UN officials to refer brigade
commanders responsible for continuing child recruitment in North
Kivu to the UN sanctions committee on Congo for possible
sanctions, including travel bans, asset freezes or other measures.
“Congolese army officers who are recruiting, training and using
child soldiers are violating international law and they know it,”
said Des Forges. “The chief of the armed forces took the first
step by ordering an end to this crime, but the military must
ensure that officers follow these orders or face serious
consequences if they refuse.”
story url
|