Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

S. Sudan govt, rebels kidnapping children to fight: UNICEF

-

South Sudan's army and rebels have stepped up the kidnapping of children to fight in the country's civil war, with hundreds snatched from villlages in the last month alone, the UN children's agency said Friday.

Providing the most detailed account yet of the country's child soldier crisis, Unicef said it believed there were now more than 12,000 children in government and rebel ranks across the country.

"It has become increasingly desperate for boy children in many areas of the conflict zone. They are being targeted. They are being rounded up and sent to the front line. This is happening as I speak," Jonathan Veitch, UNICEF's representative in the country, said.

Veitch said UNICEF had "credible and in some instances verifiable information that forces aligned with the government and opposition have abducted or coerced hundreds of children into their ranks in the past month alone", a period coinciding with the collapse of peace talks.

"Our teams on the ground and our partners are reporting a strong upsurge in recruitment at the moment and it is ongoing," he told reporters in Geneva.

South Sudan is the the world's youngest nation, having broken away from Khartoum in 2011 after a long and bloody independence struggle.

Civil war broke out in the new nation in December 2013, when President Salva Kiir accused Riek Machar, his former deputy, of planning a coup. Since then tens of thousands have died, two million have been uprooted and four million face starvation.

The government and the rebels have been accused of widespread atrocities and war crimes -- including gang rapes, massacres and attacks on aid organisations and peacekeepers.

An SPLA soldier waves his AK-47 as soldiers celebrate outside the United Nations Mission in the Repu...
An SPLA soldier waves his AK-47 as soldiers celebrate outside the United Nations Mission in the Republic of South Sudan base in Malakal after the SPLA claimed it had recaptured it on March 19, 2014
Ivan Lieman, AFP/File

Earlier this month the UN Security Council passed a US-drafted resolution creating a sanctions regime for South Sudan, although none have yet been imposed.

- 'Grabbed in villages' -

Veitch reminded South Sudan's warring factions that the resolution "specifically lists the recruitment of children as soldiers as one of the criteria for imposing sanctions".

The official said "hundreds" of children were seized from the village of Wau Shilluk in Upper Nile in an attack last month by soldiers loyal to Major-General Johnson Olony, who commands an ethnic Shilluk militia in the northern Upper Nile state, an oil-rich and fiercely contested region.

"Despite advocacy and appeals to the government and the Johnson Oloni militia which took the children, no child has been unconditionally released," he said.

Some of the children were meanwhile allowed to return home during the day, but forced to return to the training camps in the evening, he said, adding that UNICEF had "credible reports" that children were also being sent to fight on the frontline in Kaka.

In Unity State the situation in opposition areas had also worsened significantly, with soldiers rounding up children and men in their houses and elsewhere, Veitch said.

"Taken together, we believe the seizures in Unity and Upper Nile total well into the hundreds in the past month," he said.

The comments came after both the government and the rebels signalled clearly that they were in no mood for peace following the collapse of talks in Ethiopia's capital Addis Ababa.

On Thursday, the rebels said the civil war would likely drag on and that "fighting will continue until one side is defeated". President Kiir earlier this week also ruled out sharing power with Machar, rejecting key elements of peace deal proposed by regional mediators.

South Sudan’s army and rebels have stepped up the kidnapping of children to fight in the country’s civil war, with hundreds snatched from villlages in the last month alone, the UN children’s agency said Friday.

Providing the most detailed account yet of the country’s child soldier crisis, Unicef said it believed there were now more than 12,000 children in government and rebel ranks across the country.

“It has become increasingly desperate for boy children in many areas of the conflict zone. They are being targeted. They are being rounded up and sent to the front line. This is happening as I speak,” Jonathan Veitch, UNICEF’s representative in the country, said.

Veitch said UNICEF had “credible and in some instances verifiable information that forces aligned with the government and opposition have abducted or coerced hundreds of children into their ranks in the past month alone”, a period coinciding with the collapse of peace talks.

“Our teams on the ground and our partners are reporting a strong upsurge in recruitment at the moment and it is ongoing,” he told reporters in Geneva.

South Sudan is the the world’s youngest nation, having broken away from Khartoum in 2011 after a long and bloody independence struggle.

Civil war broke out in the new nation in December 2013, when President Salva Kiir accused Riek Machar, his former deputy, of planning a coup. Since then tens of thousands have died, two million have been uprooted and four million face starvation.

The government and the rebels have been accused of widespread atrocities and war crimes — including gang rapes, massacres and attacks on aid organisations and peacekeepers.

An SPLA soldier waves his AK-47 as soldiers celebrate outside the United Nations Mission in the Repu...

An SPLA soldier waves his AK-47 as soldiers celebrate outside the United Nations Mission in the Republic of South Sudan base in Malakal after the SPLA claimed it had recaptured it on March 19, 2014
Ivan Lieman, AFP/File

Earlier this month the UN Security Council passed a US-drafted resolution creating a sanctions regime for South Sudan, although none have yet been imposed.

– ‘Grabbed in villages’ –

Veitch reminded South Sudan’s warring factions that the resolution “specifically lists the recruitment of children as soldiers as one of the criteria for imposing sanctions”.

The official said “hundreds” of children were seized from the village of Wau Shilluk in Upper Nile in an attack last month by soldiers loyal to Major-General Johnson Olony, who commands an ethnic Shilluk militia in the northern Upper Nile state, an oil-rich and fiercely contested region.

“Despite advocacy and appeals to the government and the Johnson Oloni militia which took the children, no child has been unconditionally released,” he said.

Some of the children were meanwhile allowed to return home during the day, but forced to return to the training camps in the evening, he said, adding that UNICEF had “credible reports” that children were also being sent to fight on the frontline in Kaka.

In Unity State the situation in opposition areas had also worsened significantly, with soldiers rounding up children and men in their houses and elsewhere, Veitch said.

“Taken together, we believe the seizures in Unity and Upper Nile total well into the hundreds in the past month,” he said.

The comments came after both the government and the rebels signalled clearly that they were in no mood for peace following the collapse of talks in Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa.

On Thursday, the rebels said the civil war would likely drag on and that “fighting will continue until one side is defeated”. President Kiir earlier this week also ruled out sharing power with Machar, rejecting key elements of peace deal proposed by regional mediators.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Business

Speaking at the Innovation Week YYC Launch Party, Naheed Nenshi shared his vision for how Alberta can harness its innovation potential.

Life

COVID-19 pandemic did not lead to an excess in suicide mortality in 2020, that does not mean that the pandemic wasn't related, in some...

Tech & Science

Video game "Astro Bot" -- a family-friendly sci-fi adventure -- was named 2024's Game of the Year on Thursday - Copyright AFP Philip FONGVideo...