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CHILD SOLDIERS

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CHILD SOLDIERS RATIFICATION AS RECOGNITION OF THE RIGHTS, WORTH, AND DIGNITY OF THE CHILD Any child girl or boy under the age of 18, who is part of any ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CHILD SOLDIERS


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CHILD SOLDIERS
  • RATIFICATION AS RECOGNITION OF THE RIGHTS, WORTH,
    AND DIGNITY OF THE CHILD

3
Child Soldiers Who is a child soldier?
  • Any child girl or boy under the age of 18,
  • who is part of any kind of regular or irregular
  • armed force or armed group, including but
  • not limited to combatants, cooks, porters,
  • messengers, and anyone accompanying
  • such groups other than as family members. This
    includes girls and boys recruited for sexual
    purposes and/or forced marriage (UNICEF).

4
FACTS AND FIGURES
  • 300,000 children under the age of eighteen are
    currently participating in armed conflicts,
    120,000 of whom are in Africa.
  • Child soldiers are recruited in more than forty
    different countries on nearly every continent.
  • 1.5 million children dead 4 million disabled or
    maimed in conflicts.
  • While most child soldiers are in their teens,
    some are as young as seven years old.


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Child Soldiers Where are child soldiers?
Children at War Around the World
Source UN
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Child Soldiers What do you know?
  • During what years of your life are you considered
    a child?
  • How many countries would you guess use child
    soldiers in todays world? A few? A lot?
  • Why would an army want to use child soldiers?
  • Can children be accepted into the United States
    Armed Forces?

7
REASONS FOR CHILD RECRUITMENT
  • Cheap assistancechildren do not demand salaries
    as adults do
  • Children less likely to run away during long,
    drawn-out conflicts
  • Regarded as more expendable than adult
    counterparts
  • Easier to condition into fearless killing and
    unthinking obedience
  • Proliferation of light weapons that are easily
    manipulated and assembled by children

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Child Soldiers Which children are affected?
  • Children in extreme poverty who are desperate for
    food and shelter.
  • Children without identification papers.
  • Orphans and children with weak family structures.
  • Children living in refugee camps or conflict
    zones.

Source UN
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TREATMENT OF CHILD SOLDIERS
  • Brutal initiations involving cannibalism
  • Used as human shields
  • Girls raped, physically abused, made sex slaves
  • Abducted, marched to physical exhaustion,
    tortured, beaten, and abused, then forced to do
    the same to family and members of community
  • Held in virtual slavery in clandestine camps,
    serving as guards, concubines, and soldiers

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Child Soldiers What do child soldiers do?
  • Child soldiers often fight on the front lines of
    conflict.
  • They serve as scouts, spies, trainers, saboteurs,
    decoys, couriers, guards, and landmine clearers.
  • Child soldiers also work indirectly as porters
    and domestic servants.
  • Girl soldiers are often used as sexual
  • slaves or are given as rewards to
  • male soldiers as wives.

Source MSNBC
11
Child Soldiers Whats being done to stop the use
of child soldiers?
  • The Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)
    signed by the United Nations General Assembly in
    1989 protects children under the age of 15 from
    involvement in the armed forces.
  • All countries but Somalia and the United States
    have ratified the CRC.
  • A 2000 Protocol (optional addition) to the CRC
    raised the age from 15 to 18 years.
  • This Protocol also prohibits non-governmental
    armed groups from recruiting soldiers under the
    age of 18.

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UN CONVENTION ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD
  • States Parties shall take all feasible measures
    to ensure that persons who have not attained the
    age of fifteen years do not take a direct part in
    hostilities.
  • States Parties shall refrain from recruiting any
    person who has not attained the age of fifteen
    years into their armed forces.
  • States Parties undertake to respect and to ensure
    respect for rules of international humanitarian
    law applicable to them in armed conflicts which
    are relevant to the child.

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OPTIONAL PROTOCOL ON THE INVOLVEMENT OF CHILDREN
IN ARMED CONFLICT
  • States Parties shall take all feasible measures
    to ensure that members of their armed forces who
    have not attained the age of 18 years do not take
    a direct part in hostilities.
  • States Parties shall ensure that persons who have
    not attained the age of 18 years are not
    compulsorily recruited into their armed forces.
  • States Parties shall raise in years the minimum
    age for the voluntary recruitment of persons into
    their national armed forces.

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RATIFICATION OF THE UN CONVENTION AND THE
OPTIONAL PROTOCOL
  • Ratified by 191 countries
  • Only two countries have not ratified the United
    States, which has signaled its intention to
    ratify by formally signing the Convention, and
    Somalia.
  • The Optional Protocol on the involvement of
    children in armed conflict will enter into force
    on 12 February.
  • To date, 93 countries have signed and 13 have
    ratified this Protocol.

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RATIFICATIONA JOINT U.S.-SOMALIA VENTURE
  • The Convention on the Rights of the Child is the
    most widely and rapidly ratified human rights
    treaty in history.
  • Somalia and the United States are obliged to
    ratify the Convention.
  • Pressure must be placed on both countries to
    facilitate ratification through cooperation among
    human rights organizations, peace and conflict
    research institutes, academicians, governments,
    and INDIVIDUALS.
  • The world must embrace the Optional Protocol.

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Child Soldiers Whats being done to help child
soldiers return to normal life?
  • Disarmament to remove all weapons from the
    child.
  • Demobilization the point at which the child
    leaves military life.
  • Rehabilitation and Reintegration
  • to prepare a child to return to
  • normal life.
  • Can be difficult for child to readjust.
  • The UN and NGOs try to provide psychological
    support, education, and job training.

Source BBC
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Child Soldiers What you can do
  • Educate yourself about Child Soldiers.
  • Contact local, state, and national politicians
    for information about Child Soldiers.
  • Write letters asking for their opinion on Child
    Soldiers
  • Talk to your parents about Child Soldiers.
  • Educate the adults in your life!
  • Advocate for Child Soldiers awareness!
  • Begin a social awareness/human rights club
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