|
Rights abuses still plague
Congo's children -Annan
June 20, 2006 - (Reuters) Despite an international
crackdown, children are still being abducted, raped, and forcibly
recruited as soldiers in Congo, with Congolese soldiers and police
the main perpetrators, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said on
Tuesday.
A key problem is the rapid changes the security
forces are undergoing in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Annan
said in a report to the U.N. Security Council. The government is
seeking to integrate former rebel fighters into its army and police
as it tries to put behind it a 1998-2003 civil war that pulled in
armies from six neighboring countries and killed 4 million people,
most of whom died from hunger and disease. "These violations
have occurred despite the efforts of the international community
to support the training of those forces within the framework of
security sector reform," he said.
Annan cited reports of 29 cases of child abductions
and 60 children killed over the past 12-month period. Cases of continued
recruitment of child soldiers by the Congolese armed forces were
of particular concern, Annan said. The chief of staff of the armed
forces was notified of more than 26 cases of recruitment of child
soldiers and other violations in the past year, he said.
There has been some progress this year in convincing
the government and its judicial authorities to crack down on abuses.
But pursuing complaints in the courts is costly and the Congolese
people generally distrust the judicial system, enabling the security
services to largely ignore serious rights violations, he said. Such
violations against children and other civilians "are generally
not investigated or punished by the national authorities,"
whether committed by government forces or rebel soldiers who remain
active in the vast central African country, his report said.
From: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N31279724.htm
|