Home The News Opinion Culture The Community feature About Watan عربي



  • Forgot your password?
  • Forgot your username?
  • Create an account

Opinion

United States-Israel Showdown?

The Israel lobby is mobilizing for what might turn into the most significant confrontation between the United States and Israel since, the Suez War of 1956, when President Eisenhower told...

Read More

Good Muslim, Bad Muslim

The dust from the collapse of the twin towers had hardly settled on 11 September 2001 when the febrile search began for "moderate Muslims", people who would provide answers, who...

Read More

Activism is Change, Not academic Squabbles and Bickering

An activist is a person who feels strongly about a cause and who is also willing to dedicate time and energy towards advancing and realizing this cause.

Read More

The Woeful Washington Post

The Washington Post’s editors never tire of basking in the faded glory of Watergate, a scandal that occurred nearly four decades ago. Some outsiders also still call the Post “liberal.”...

Read More

Muslims Are Their Own Worst Enemy

Muslims are numerous but powerless. Divisions among Muslims, especially between Sunni and Shiites, have consigned the Muslim Middle East to almost a century of Western control. Muslims cannot even play...

Read More

Mossad’s Murderous Reach: The Larger Political Issues

On January 19 Israel’s international secret police, the Mossad, sent an eighteen member death squad to Dubai using European passports, supposedly ‘stolen’ from Israeli dual citizens and altered with fake...

Read More
Child soldiers on the rise in Yemen PDF Print E-mail
Written by (IRIN)   
Monday, 14 December 2009 05:51

SANAA - The huge poster hanging in the press conference shows a Yemeni boy dressed in a traditional brown robe, holding a detonator in one hand, while with the other he lifts his gown to reveal packages strapped to his legs.

 

He looks just like what the local media reported him to be: a child suicide bomber. Above the poster the Arabic reads: “No, to the exploitation of children for destructive operations and terrorism.”

 

Akram, the nine-year-old boy in the poster, stands up in front of the microphones and before the assembled crowd of officials, children’s rights groups and journalists gathered in Sanaa last month for Yemen’s first open discussion on child soldiers, and delivers his message: “To use children in war is wrong.”

 

Rights groups estimate several thousand child soldiers have been involved in the war between government forces and Houthi rebels in northern Yemen since 2004.

 

The day after the press conference, Akram’s father said his son never carried explosives. “Bomb? There was never any bomb. There were 30 detonators, but no explosives,” he said.

 

Akram said he was asked by a distant cousin to deliver a package of wires to a friend in Saada’s Old City. “He said, ‘This is just wires.’ He tied the bags to my legs and put something in my pocket,” said Akram.

 

Children in conflict

 

Whatever the truth about what Akram was carrying, his exploitation as a child soldier in Yemen is far from unique. A culture of under 18s carrying arms is ingrained in Yemen’s tribal society.

 

“We have a saying here,” said Ahmed al-Gorashi, chairman of Seyaj, a local NGO working to prevent the use of child soldiers: “If you are old enough to carry the `jambiya’ [a curved dagger traditionally worn in the belt of Yemeni men] then you are old enough to fight with your tribe. And children carry the `jambiya’ from 12 years old.”

 

Across Yemen, it is common to see boys of 13 or 14 carrying Kalashnikovs as they ride with members of their tribe in the back of pick-up trucks.

 

The government accuses the Houthi rebels of using children as soldiers and of recruiting young boys from schools in Saada into their Believing Youth movement.

 

“The Houthis use children to recruit other children from schools. They send the children leaflets and books to read saying joining Believing Youth is a way to become closer to God,” said Mariam al-Shwafi, manager of Shawthab, a local NGO.

 

 

“The Houthis use children as fighters, as a means of communication between groups of fighters and as couriers,” said Gorashi.

 

“Deep cultural issue”

 

The official minimum age for joining the army is 18, but the tribes which the government arms and finances to fight the Houthis alongside the army also often use children.

 

“The government is not knowingly recruiting underage soldiers into the army, but the tribal militias they are signing up are using child soldiers,” said Andrew Moore, country director of Save the Children in Yemen. “It’s a deep cultural issue, but if we don’t talk about it, it’s never going to change.”

 

No accurate figures exist for the number of children being used as soldiers in Yemen.

 

However, Seyaj estimates that under 18s may make up more than half the fighting force of tribes, both those fighting with the Houthis and those allied with the government.

 

In a country of 23 million people, there are believed to be up to 17 million guns, according to the Small Arms Survey, with hundreds of children killed or injured every year through direct involvement in combat.

 

UN concerned

 

The problem of child soldiers in Yemen is now grabbing the attention of the international community. UNICEF has been tasked with producing a report on child soldiers in Yemen by the end of the year for the UN special representative of the Secretary-General on “children and armed conflict”, Radhika Coomaraswamy, who said she was extremely concerned that “large numbers” of teenage boys have been dragged into the fighting.

 

Yemen is a party to the Convention on the Rights of the Child and ratified in 2007 its two optional protocols which “require States to do everything they can to prevent individuals under the age of 18 from taking direct part in hostilities”.

 

Persistent failure to prevent children taking part in conflict is considered a war crime by prosecutors at the International Criminal Court.

 

But no investigation can make things right for Akram.

 

The day after he was caught by the police and his name appeared on local TV, a bomb targeted Akram’s house in Sadaa’s Old City. His little brother was injured and is being cared for by his grandmother. Akram and his father now live in hiding in Sanaa, too scared to go home.

 

“I miss my grandmother and I’m worried about my brother. I’m not together with all my family and I want to see them again, but I can’t because of this war,” said the boy. (IRIN)


Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
bold italicize underline strike url image quote Smile Wink Laugh Grin Angry Sad Shocked Cool Tongue Kiss Cry
smaller | bigger

busy
 

Feature

The Third Intifada: “day of rage” and “day of infamy”

News image

It seems that yesterday, March 16th, the third Intifada of the Israeli era was unofficially...

Read More

Parents of Rachel Corrie speak out

News image

HAIFA: Rachel Corrie was a college student from Washington state who tried to slow the...

Read More

Iraqi women miss Saddam Hussein's days

News image

Under Saddam Hussein, women in government got a year's maternity leave; that is now cut...

Read More

Iraq Defeats Avatar in Oscar

News image

HOLLYWOOD — The low-grossing Iraq war thriller "The Hurt Locker" has swept the prestigious...

Read More

Women-only taxis hit Cairo streets

News image

CAIRO - A waxed rag in hand, Inas Hamam gives her car a good buff...

Read More

Good times for Baghdad printers ahead of Iraq polls

News image

BAGHDAD - Business has never been so good for Iraq's printers in the runup to...

Read More

All Right Reserved © Watan 1992 - 2008