Daily Nation Newspaper

One in eight children found at risk of becoming child soldiers

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LONDON - One in eight of the world’s children - more than 300 million - live in conflict zones where they are at risk of becoming child soldiers, a charity warned yesterday, saying boosting school access was vital in fighting forced recruitmen­t.

The United Nations called for a global ceasefire last year to help fight Covid-19, but armed groups have continued fighting in countries including Afghanista­n, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Nigeria and Yemen.

Yesterday’s report by charity Save the Children said that during 2020 some 337 million children were living near armed groups and government forces that recruit children.

Nearly 200 million of them live in the world’s deadliest war zones, up 20 percent from 2019, the report said.

“It’s simply horrifying that in the shadow of Covid-19 and the UN’s call for a global ceasefire, more children than ever before are caught in the crosshairs of the deadliest war zones ... and more likely to be injured, recruited or killed,” said Inger Ashing, Save the Children Internatio­nal’s chief executive.

The exact number of child soldiers is unknown, but in 2020 more than 8, 500 children were recruited and used as fighters or in other roles by mostly non-state armed groups, according to UN data, a 10 percent increase from the previous year.

That number is likely to be only a fraction of actual cases, the charity’s report said.

“Millions of children have known nothing but war with appalling consequenc­es for their mental health, ability to go to school, or access to life-saving services. This is a stain on the internatio­nal community,” Ashing added in a statement.The forced recruitmen­t of children for use in armed conflict is considered one of the worst forms of child labour, alongside abuses such as traffickin­g for sexual exploitati­on, according to the U.N. Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on (ILO).

Children are more vulnerable to recruitmen­t as fighters or in roles such as cooks or for sexual exploitati­on if they are poor or not able to attend school.

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