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Refugee Survey Quarterly 2008 27(4):108-122; doi:10.1093/rsq/hdn054
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© UNHCR [2009]. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

This article appears in the following Refugee Survey Quarterly issue: CHILDREN AT RISK [View the issue table of contents]

Child Soldiers in the East of the Democratic Republic of the Congo

Claude Rakisits*

*Claude Rakisits is an adjunct professor at the Webster University at Geneva, Switzerland. This article is based on an address delivered to the 13th Annual Humanitarian Conference, Geneva, 21–22 February 2008. A post-script briefly discusses the latest developments since fighting resumed in August 2008.


   Abstract

According to the academic literature, the most widely used estimate is that approximately 300,000 children are part of regular and irregular armies worldwide, either as combatants or as support personnel. Moreover, most scholars believe that their numbers are growing. However, the truth is that no one really knows the actual number of child soldiers fighting in some seventy-two government or rebel forces in about twenty countries. This is simply because field work on this subject is notoriously difficult. And as it is in breach of international humanitarian law to engage a child under the age of 18 years, regular armies and guerrilla forces are hardly going to publicize the number of child soldiers in their ranks. Whatever the true number of child soldiers may be, the fact remains that child soldiers have become a principal component of military forces across Africa, Asia, and Latin America. For Africa alone, estimates suggest that there are 120,000 children, 40 per cent of all child soldiers. Moreover, not only has Africa experienced the fastest growth in the use of child soldiers, but the average age of the children enlisted in some African countries is declining as well. And this is despite the fact that there are a number of international treaties and principles that prohibit the use of child soldiers. Successfully bringing peace, security, and the rule of law in the Kivu provinces, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), will be a massive challenge that will require domestic and regional measures implemented over probably several years. This will necessitate the continued active political and financial support of the international community.


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