A report released earlier
this summer shows the depths to which the fighting in Syria has fallen.
According to the Official Website of the Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights, more than 50 child soldiers recruited by the Islamic State
and who were all below the age of 16 years have died so far this year in Syria.
The recruitment program, known as "cubs of the caliphate" recruits children
between the ages of 10 to 15 years of age to fight with their older ISIS
counterparts. As if this weren't enough, ISIS has released a booklet
entitled "Sister's Role in Jihad" that provides
instructions for women on raising mujahid children suggesting that mothers
should introduce their children to target shooting at a young age.
According to the Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights, the Islamic State is believed to have recruited more than 1100 children
since the beginning of 2015. The child recruits are
taught how to approach and enter a property, subdue and remove an occupant and
how to use the captive as a hostage. As well, they are taught how to
ambush a moving vehicle and receive training as snipers and suicide bombers.
Since hundreds of the children have arrived from foreign nations
throughout Europe and South Asia, they are enrolled in religious schools, two
of which cater to English speakers. Children are initially lured through
a process of gradual socialization through attendance at public events where
they are treated with free toys and candy. Children are also encouraged
to attend and watch public executions, learning exactly what infractions will
result in the ultimate form of corporal punishment as shown in this
video:
The Islamic State does
not view these young soldiers as being useful for their propaganda value, they
are viewed as fully qualified fighters who can and will kill their enemies.
The children fall into five categories:
1.) those who were
abandoned and ended up in ISIS-controlled orphanages.
2.) those who were taken
by coercion from their parents.
3.) those who were born
to foreign fighters.
4.) those who were born
to local fighters.
5.) those who voluntarily
joined the Islamic State.
This pattern of
recruitment is much different than the recruitment of child soldiers in other
parts of the globe, mainly Africa. In those cases, most of the children
are orphans or are abducted and the militants act as their family.
Much of ISIS' recruitment
strategy falls under the guise of "education" as we can see in this video which looks like a typical
classroom that could be found in many parts of the developing world:
In many parts of Syria,
the government-run education system has collapsed. Where ISIS has taken
over control of the educational and religious infrastructure, they have an
opportunity to teach their ISIS-based curriculum to gender-segregated classes.
Younger children are groomed as spies and are encouraged to report on family
members and neighbours who criticize ISIS. As they get older, a select
number will make it to the "Cubs Club" where they will receive
intense military-style training. All of the experiences that child soldiers
receive under the tutelage of older members of ISIS are designed to generate a
sense of camaraderie and loyalty.
The actual number of
child soldiers fighting in Syria is unknown, however the Violations
Documentation Center in Syria had documented the deaths of 194
non-civilian male children in Syria between September 2011 and June 2014.
It is important to note
that, according to a report by Human Rights Watch, as early as
November 2012, boys as young as 14 years of age were used in support roles for
the Free Syrian Army, an umbrella term for the armed groups that are fighting
against Syrian government troops. Children were also used by the YPG
(Kurdish People's Protection Units) military and Asayish police forces in
Kurdish-controlled northern Syria in their fight against ISIS. Some
children are paid for their efforts, receiving a monthly salary in the range of
USD100 per month. Unfortunately, the children who wish to leave armed
groups and resume a civilian life are given little opportunity to do so.
In the interest of
balance, a report from al-Araby states that the Syrian regime also recruits
children. The National Defence Force which was formed to recruit fighters to replace the
soldiers defecting from Assad's Syrian Arab Army also accepts fighters under the
age of 18. The Popular Committees also known as the al-Lijan Militias
(People's Committees) who were formed to support the Assad regime started out
as neighbourhood vigilante groups in major Syrian cities. They were armed
by the Assad regime and add another layer of protection for the current
government. Reportedly, as many as 40 percent of the
recruits in al-Lijan are under the age of 18 years.
Conscripting or enlisting
children as either fighters or in support roles is a war crime under the Rome
Statute of the International Criminal Court. As well, the Optional Protocol to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child has set 19 as the minimum age for directly participating in
hostilities and 15 as the minimum age for recruitment as shown in these statements:
"Noting the adoption of the Rome Statute of the International
Criminal Court, in particular, the inclusion therein as a war crime, of
conscripting or enlisting children under the age of 15 years or using them to
participate actively in hostilities in both international and non-international
armed conflict…
Noting that the twenty-sixth International Conference of the
Red Cross and Red Crescent in December 1995 recommended, inter alia, that
parties to conflict take every feasible step to ensure that children below the
age of 18 years do not take part in hostilities…"
This Protocol was ratified by Syria in 2003 as shown on this table:
With this information in
mind, is it any wonder that millions of Syrian families have fled their homes?
Most parents would rather face an uncertain economic future than face the
possibility that their children could be recruited to fight on either side of
an unwinnable and brutal conflict.
As the world matured, communications improved, and people traveled more many of us hoped the catalyst for war would diminish. Instead with new technology we have only expanded our abilities to spread death and destruction. National pride, political agendas, religious and ethnic hatreds are some of the biggest roadblocks to world peace. Sadly over the history of mankind peace has been the exception rather then the rule.
ReplyDeleteWhile those who benefit from the production of weapons busy themselves with promoting war as a solution to our woes as an answer war often fails to be either easy, swift, or true. The true reality is that across the world few mothers want to see their children killed and most farmers want to be left along to raise their crops and earn a living.
Though we live in an imperfect world mankind should not bring more misery upon himself by self inflicting injury. War tends to open a Pandora's box rather than the easy solutions and answers we seek. More on the subject of war and the reason it is not a solution to conflict in the article below.
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2014/05/war-and-what-is-it-good-for.html