became a member of the infamous S.B.U. or Small Boys Unit.
unquestioning obedience
extreme cruelty.
often high on marijuana or crack cocaine, many of the thousands of children who took part in Sierra Leone's 10-year civil war visited terrible atrocities on the civilian population.
child soldiers sometimes cut open the bellies of pregnant women just to see what sex the child was.
Without the power of the gun, the guerrillas, and their child recruits, would simply not have been able to terrorise the country in the way they did.
attempted to comprehend it's own 'insanity'. Chief among the questions being asked is how factions like the RUF were able to acquire their weapons?
"They used to give us, the S.B.U, those small guns because if they give us some kind of heavy artillery we would not be able to carry them.
The camp director said that
when the youths had been given drugs-most likely, amphetamines-while
soldiering, they "would do just about anything that was ordered."
Some, he added, were proud of having been effective killers.
Many of the boys, ranging from nine to 16
years of age, had killed people as they fought in a civil war that
paused with a fragile cease-fire in 1995.
shortly before been willing to kill and who had
never received an adequate foundation of moral development,
end of the Cold War ushered in an era of ethnopolitical conflicts that
are seldom fought on well-defined battlefields
increasingly internal,
characterized by butchery;
violence against women, and atrocities sometimes committed by former
neighbors.
80 percent of the victims are noncombatants,
mostly women and children.
children serve as combatants or as cooks, informants,
porters, bodyguards, sentries, and spies.
children participate in relatively
unstructured but politically motivated acts of violence, such as
throwing stones or planting bombs.
far greater
problem than suggested by the scant attention it has received.
found from Central America to the Great Lakes region of
Central Africa, and from Belfast in the north to Angola in the south.
The problem defies gender boundaries.
Typically, sexual victimization is a part of soldiering for girls,
many of whom are forced to become "soldiers' wives." After the
conflict ends, families and local communities may reject the girls as
impure or unsuitable for marriage. Desperate to survive, many former
girl soldiers become prostitutes.
The use of child soldiers violates international norms. The U. N.
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), signed in 1989 and
ratified by more than 160 nations, establishes 15 years as the minimum
recruitment age. In fact, most countries have endorsed an optional
protocol that boosts the minimum recruitment age to 18 years.
Yes," he said. He would have done "what he
had to do." When asked what he wanted for the future, he said, "I only
want to go to school."
in developing countries, in which
children constitute nearly half the population and in which children
are often reared in a system that mixes war, poverty, violence,
hunger, environmental degradation, and political instability.
Many Angolan children report nightmares and flashbacks, display
heightened aggressiveness, and suffer from hopelessness. Thousands of
children-defined as people under 18 years of age-entered the military.
For both parents and children, war had become normal.
Violent youths, however, may yet sabotage the cease-fire.
How widespread is child soldiering? Numbers are hard to come by. The
destruction and turmoil of war make it difficult to create and
preserve accurate records. Particularly in Africa, many countries have
no history of keeping precise birth records.
military groups, governmental and rebel, make no
attempt to document or accurately report the ages of the children they
recruit.
The best estimate-which is admittedly soft-is that in the mid-1990s,
there were about a quarter of a million child soldiers, current or
recently demobilized.