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Conscription of children,
sexual abuse unabated in Darfur - UN
February 2 , 2007- (IRIN) Boys in Sudan’s
war-torn Darfur region are increasingly at risk of being recruited
into armed groups, while sexual violence against girls is unabated,
despite growing official awareness, a top United Nations envoy said
on Thursday.
Following visits to Darfur and the South Sudanese
capital of Juba and meetings with top Sudanese government representatives,
Radhika Coomaraswamy, the UN Special Representative to the Secretary-General
on Children and Armed Conflict, told reporters in Khartoum that
while Sudanese officials have made promises to reduce threats to
children, little progress has been seen on the ground.
"There is recognition in Sudan at the official
level of the problems of child recruitment and sexual violence,"
Coomaraswamy said. "[Sudan] has agreed to frameworks and they
have agreed to commitments. However, we are concerned that there’s
not enough implementation and that the results are not showing on
the ground."
Children are being increasingly recruited by both
rebel factions and the Sudanese army, she said.
"Independent monitors have pointed out to us through verified
data that child recruitment is increasing in Darfur and that all
parties to the conflict engage in child recruitment," Coomaraswamy
said.
The UN envoy said she was pleased to have secured
agreements by rebels and the government to allow UN audits of military
encampments to ensure no children are present.
Coomaraswamy said that child recruitment in southern
Sudan was on the wane, following the signing in 2005 of the Comprehensive
Peace Agreement between the Sudanese government and former rebels
of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) to
end 21 years of war.However, she said programmes aimed at reintegrating
former child soldiers into society had faced difficulties.
Thousands of children were recruited into the SPLA during the civil
war and some former child soldiers are struggling to readjust to
life outside the military.
"We found that reintegration programmes of
child soldiers are not working as well as we would like," Coomaraswamy
said. "What happens is children are demobilised, but they come
back to the armed camps because they feel alienated in their communities."
She also stressed that more needs to be done to
end sexual violence against girls in Darfur. "There is recognition
of this issue at the national level," she said. "However,
the situation on the ground does not seem to have improved. Medical
reports show that there are high rates of sexual violence."
The UN envoy called for a more potent security
framework to protect women and children.
At present, the African Union (AU) is struggling
to keep a semblance of stability in Darfur, a region the size of
France, with only about 7,000 troops. Sudan has resisted plans to
have a UN-mandated force sent into Darfur to reinforce AU troops.Violence
in Darfur has killed an estimated 200,000 people and displaced at
least two million more since 2003.
From: http://sudantribune.com/imprimable.php3?id_article=20091
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