Description:
Executive Summary:
"Child involvement in armed conflict is a disturbing trend of modern times.
Nowhere is this trend more evident and extreme than in Burma, where children
are aggressively recruited and forced to join the military.
?While going to school, I was taken against my will by an unnamed
person. I was brought to Danyingone New Recruitment Center and then
to the 9th Basic Military Training School. I attended the training and
passed. I was brought to Hpa-An Township, Karen State, to serve in the
Signal Battalion.”
Former child soldier, recruited into the SPDC armed forces
in 2004 at age thirteen
The government of Burma, the State Peace and Development Council
(SPDC), has been expanding its armed forces—the ?Tatmadaw”—at an alarming
rate; and this expansion is sustained by the recruitment of children. In 1988 there
were approximately 200,000 men serving in the Tatmadaw, in 2004 estimates
were nearly 380,000 troops, and it is reported that the SPDC wants to increase
that number to 500,000.
This report examines the ongoing recruitment and use of child soldiers in
Burma. Most children interviewed for this report were forcibly recruited into army
ranks; they were coerced and deceived. Other child recruits cited economic
hardships and social pressures as their reasons for joining, the very conditions
that make them easy targets for SPDC recruiters.
Recruiters also use intimidation tactics to convince children to join the
armed forces. ?Join the military or go to jail,” were the ?options” that many children
were offered. This fear-inducing strategy is effective, almost guaranteeing that the
child will ?choose” to join the military.
Once recruited, children are detained at local army posts, police stations
or recruiting offices. They are instructed on how to fill out registration forms;
including lying about their age, as officially children under the age of 18 years are
not permitted to join the army. However authorities at all levels circumvent this
rule by forcing every recruit to say they are at least 18 years old.
?I was brought to the recruitment center, where they [military personnel]
immediately started cutting my hair and filling out forms for me. I was
only requested to give a thumb print. They asked me how old I was
and I told them that I was 14. They told me to say 18. Then I was
given a medical examination. At first the doctor wouldn?t let me join
the army because I didn?t have any pubic hair. But, the corporal who
recruited me bribed the doctor.”
Former child soldier, recruited into the SPDC armed
forces in 2003 at the age of fourteen
According to interviewees, children are then sent to complete military
training programs and subsequently sent to the frontlines to fight ?enemy” rebel
groups or serve as porters, cooks, or servants for higher ranking officers. If sent
to the frontlines they rarely know who they are fighting or why.
Children report that conditions in the detention centers and training camps
are horrible; the barracks are overcrowded and they are bullied by older recruits.
Moreover, children are routinely beaten if they make mistakes during training.
These conditions cause child soldiers to suffer from mental, emotional,
and physical exhaustion. Children, still in varying stages of development, are
unable to accommodate the stress generated by military activities. As reported
by many of the interviewees, child soldiers often cry themselves to sleep in quiet
humiliation, scared any show of weakness could invite additional reproach from
fellow soldiers and officers.
As soldiers, children are forced to perpetrate violence and commit human
rights violations. They take part in destroying villages suspected of supporting
ethnic insurgent movements; they also participate in extrajudicial killings. Children
are not prepared for the physical, emotional or psychological experience of war.
Therefore some run away from the army, some attempt suicide, while most attempt
to rationalize their experiences, which distorts their fundamental sentiments of
right and wrong.
The SPDC has promised action and in an effort to quell the recruitment
and use of child soldiers, has created the Committee for the Prevention of Military
Recruitment of Under-age Children.? However, rather than spending its
time aggressively fighting against the recruitment and use of child soldiers, the
committee focuses on contesting allegations from the UN and international and
national human rights groups about the use of child soldiers in the country.
The SPDC must stop recruiting and using children in the military. The
government?s official policies, which prohibit children from entering the military,
must be implemented and those who violate such policies should be punished.
The SPDC must play a central role in disarming, demobilizing, and rehabilitating
(DDR) former child soldiers and invite assistance from international and local
organizations willing to help with DDR programs.
The SPDC promises change; but despite promises, evidence continues
to point to SPDC?s continued recruitment, training, and deployment of child soldiers."
Source/publisher:
Human Rights Education Institute of Burma (HREIB)
Date of Publication:
2006-09-00
Date of entry:
2006-10-04
Grouping:
- Individual Documents
Category:
Language:
Burmese