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Child Soldiering in South Sudan

MEANS is pleased to feature the work of Human Rights Watch and their ongoing commitment to targeted advocacy. In this report, HRW reminds us that Human Trafficking takes on all shapes and sizes to subjugate the vulnerable many in service of the powerful few. MEANS shares HRW's passion and determination in spreading this word...

(New York) – South Sudanese leaders should help end widespread use of child soldiers by suspending and investigating commanders who have recruited children, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. Thousands of children have fought in the South Sudan conflict, including under commanders from both government and opposition forces.

South Sudan’s conflict began two years ago today, on the night of December 15, 2013.

The 65-page report, “‘We Can Die Too’: Recruitment and Use of Child Soldiers in South Sudan,” names more than 15 commanders and officials from both the government Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) and the rebel SPLA-in Opposition and their allies who have used child soldiers. The report is based on interviews with 101 child soldiers who were either forcibly recruited or joined forces to protect themselves and their communities. They said they lived for months without enough food, far away from family, and were thrown into terrifying gun battles in which they were injured and saw friends killed. Children also expressed deep regret that they had lost time they should have spent in school.

“Commanders have deliberately and brutally recruited and used children to fight, in total disregard for their safety and South Sudan’s law,” said Daniel Bekele, Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “South Sudan authorities should call a halt to the massive recruitment and use of children in this conflict, which deepens the decades-old patterns of abuse.”

The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) estimates that 15,000 to 16,000 children may have been used by armed forces and groups in the conflict. South Sudan’s civil war began in December 2013, when soldiers loyal to President Salva Kiir and former Vice President Riek Machar, now the rebel leader, fought in Juba, the capital. As the fighting spread, both sides targeted and killed civilians, including in gruesome massacres, often based on their ethnicity. Some 2.2 million people have been displaced, many from villages or towns that were burned and pillaged.

A fragile August 2015 peace deal has not ended the violence. The UN Security Council, which began imposing sanctions in mid-2015, should sanction commanders who recruited child soldiers, and others credibly accused of committing serious human rights violations. The Security Council should also impose an arms embargo on both sides to stop the flow of weapons that could be used to commit abuses into the country, Human Rights Watch said. Some of the children interviewed said they joined up when guns became available.

Human Rights Watch documented numerous cases of recruitment – often forced – and use of child soldiers by the government commander, Matthew Puljang, and his forces who fought in Unity state, and by Johnson Olony, who has fought with both the government and opposition in Upper Nile state. His forces recruited boys from just outside a UN base protected by peacekeepers as well as in the town of Malakal. Government commissioners, who perform a military function in times of war, also used child soldiers in the town of Bentiu, Unity state.

Boys also fought under opposition commanders including James Koang, Peter Gadet, and Makal Kuol. Another opposition commander took hundreds of boys from two schools in Rubkona, Unity state, in the first days of the conflict.

“They said we must join the army, if not they would beat us. My two colleagues refused to go and they beat them,” one 15-year-old boy said about a government army recruitment drive in Unity state. “We defeated and killed a lot of people,” another 15-year-old who joined opposition forces said. “We were shooting, me and the other young kids. We were afraid but we had to do it anyway.”

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