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Criminal charge in child soldier case a milestone in
protecting children |
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Unicef
By
Kate Donovan
March 18, 2006
New York. Friday’s arrest of Thomas
Lubanga by the International Criminal Court, on a charge of
conscripting and enlisting children and actively using them in
hostilities in the Democratic Republic of Congo, sends an important
message that the international community will not tolerate the use
of children in armed conflict, UNICEF said. It shows the high
priority that the international community gives to combating crimes
against children.
“It is important to protect children from being recruited and
used in armed conflict,” UNICEF Executive Director Ann M. Veneman
said. “Wars must never be fought by children. Whether children are
forcibly recruited, join armed groups in order to escape poverty or
hunger, or enlist to actively support a cause, the first loss is
their childhood.”
UNICEF estimates that at any given time, up to 300,000 children
globally are being used in armed groups and forces in a variety of
roles, including as combatants, cooks, porters, messengers, spies
and for sexual purposes.
Lubanga, a Congolese national and alleged founder and leader of
the Union des Patriotes Congolais (UPC), was arrested in Kinshasa on
Friday and transferred to the International Criminal Court in The
Hague as part of the judicial proceedings under the Rome Statute.
Entered into force in July 2002, the Rome Statute makes the
conscription, enlistment or use of children under 15 in hostilities
by national armed forces or armed groups a war crime.
Under the Rome Statute, individuals can be held criminally
accountable. Lubanga is the first person to be arrested and
transferred to the International Criminal Court since the entry into
force of the Rome Statute.
UNICEF has a long history of assisting and protecting children in
times of conflict. UNICEF advocates for the national adoption of
international legal standards that limit the participation of
children in armed conflict, works to secure the release of child
soldiers, and supports disarmament, demobilization and reintegration
programmes in such countries as Afghanistan, Liberia and Democratic
Republic of Congo.
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