African Press International (API)

"Daily Online News Channel".

Archive for October 14th, 2012

Islamists recruiting children

Posted by African Press International on October 14, 2012

Rigorous fitness training is part of the militia camp curriculum

SEVARÉ,  – Children as young as 14 are joining military training camps run by militias in southern Mali preparing to fight Islamist groups in the north. At the same time, Islamist groups in the north are recruiting children as young as 11 to man checkpoints, gather intelligence, search vehicles and patrol the streets in Gao, Timbuktu and Kidal, according to aid agencies and human rights groups.

Fatoumata Tall, a 16-year-old from Ségou in south-central Mali, had never held a rifle before coming to a militia training camp in Sevaré, in central Mali about 45km from the Islamist-held north.

After six months of rigorous training mainly from former soldiers in the Malian army, she is ready for battle, saying she cannot accept the occupation, or the Islamists imposing Sharia in her country.

“I am determined to fight… Our goal is to liberate the north. Whatever the price, we can’t abandon our people,” she told IRIN.

In Sevaré alone, hundreds of youths and children, many of them 14 or under, are living and training in run-down barracks or school-buildings. They spend hours each day learning how to use a gun, simulating hand-to-hand combat, and exercising.

Calling themselves the FLN, or the Liberation Front of the North, most are proud to be here and many have come without their parents’ knowledge or approval. “It’s my country and I’m doing whatever it takes to defend it,” said Fatoumata Tall, explaining that her parents would force her to leave immediately if they knew where she was.

One camp holds 1,000 youths, another 400, according to militia trainer Col Ibrahima Outtara, though IRIN was unable to verify these figures.

''My only fear is having to fight my friends''

The militia are short on arms and have to borrow guns from the Malian army for weapons-training, said leaders at FLN camp just outside of Mopti. The government promised food, equipment and funding but it never materialized, so trainers rely on handouts from the local population to get by.

None of the youths IRIN spoke to had eaten more than one meal of rice per day.

One of the drivers behind a military coup that ousted President Amadou Toumani Touré in March was the long-term neglect and marginalization of the Malian army, which needed more manpower, weaponry and better training to take on Islamists in the north. In what Reuters described as a “spectacular own goal” the political havoc in the south was a contributing factor to Tuareg rebels and Islamist groups taking control in the north.

Tall hopes to join the army when she “graduates” but Mohammad Maiga, a former soldier who directs one of the camps, said he knows recruits will not be accepted as they are under-age.

Mali is a party to the Convention of the Rights of the Child and its Optional Protocol, barring recruitment of children under 18.

Islamists recruiting children

Meanwhile, children are being recruited into Islamist militias in the north, where they have been seen manning checkpoints, conducting foot patrols, riding in patrol vehicles, guarding prisoners and enforcing Sharia law, according to human rights groups and aid agencies, including Human Rights Watch (HRW), the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Cri de Coeur, the Human Rights Commission in Mali, and Malian human rights group TEMEDT.

One witness described to HRW how children were being taught to gather intelligence by walking through town and later repeating what they had heard.

Many children are recruited through the Islamists’ Koranic schools, said Ibrahim Ag Idbaltanat, director of TEMEDT. “First the children hear the ideology and later this becomes the driving force,” he told IRIN.

Children armed with Kalashnikovs often man checkpoints, stopping and searching buses coming from the north and asking if any Malian army members are present, he noted.
In August 2012, UNICEF reported at least 175 boys aged 12-18 being associated with armed groups; other groups say over 1,000 children are estimated to be involved, some aged as young as 11.


Photo: Katarina Höije/IRIN
A militia trainee. Most come from Ségou and Bamako in the south, and Gao in the north

Former Timbuktu resident Sankoum Sissoko told IRIN in Sevaré: “There is one camp on the outskirts of town [Timbuktu] where many children train… They carry guns and some of them are even taught how to shoot. Everyone knows about it but no one dares to speak up.”

Paid to join

Many families said they had no choice but to let their children join Ansar Dine and Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQMI) as they need the cash. Islamists pay about 75,000 CFA (US$150) per month, according to 16-year-old Adijatou Touré from Gao.

Sadou Diallo, once-mayor of Gao now exiled in the capital Bamako, said many families had little choice. “With no functioning government the Islamists are the main force. With no work and little means to support themselves parents let their children join the militia knowing they will be fed, but also for security,” he said, noting it is parents rather than the children who are paid.

Some militia members in the south have even switched sides to join Islamist groups in the north, said Touré. ”I can’t blame them… Here [in the south] you hardly get fed,” She will not abandon the militia’s cause, she told IRIN. “My only fear is having to fight my friends.”

The already fragile economy in the north and throughout much of Mali has been severely strained by the takeover by Islamist groups in the north. While an estimated 450,000 fled the region, many of those who stayed were too poor to leave (or were left to try to guard the assets and houses of those who left). Northern residents face crumbling livelihoods, food insecurity, unsually high malnutrition rates and deteriorating basic services.

The government, UN agencies and NGOs are calling on armed groups to stop child recruitment, stop using schools as military bases, and release all those children already recruited.

“Mali has fully implemented international laws to protect children rights, but with no government representation in the north we have no way of enforcing them,” said Ousmane Touré, director at the Ministry for Promoting Women and Children in Bamako.

Recruitment of children under 15 is a war crime under international humanitarian law and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.

kh/aj/cb
source www.irinnews.org

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | Leave a Comment »

Jan Egeland of Human Right Watch wants faster progress

Posted by African Press International on October 14, 2012

BANGKOK,  – On the sidelines of a recent presentation he made in Bangkok on disaster prevention and preparedness, IRIN spoke to Jan Egeland, deputy director of Human Rights Watch, about progress on the Global Framework for Climate Services (GFCS).

Spearheaded by the World Meteorological Organization and based on research from an expert group Egeland chaired in 2009, GFCS aims to increase and improve interactions between experts who interpret, gather and purvey climate-related information (climate service providers) and the people who use it.

Q: How far has GFCS come in making climate information accessible for the average small farmer?

A: The main problem of global climate services today is that it doesn’t reach the last mile to those who need it the most. So, typically, the farmer who needs to know when to sow or when to harvest in an unpredictable climate doesn’t really get that… More often he doesn’t get the information if he is in a poor and developing country, nor does the doctor who would need to know when malaria will [be] affected by rainfall, or meningitis [by] the course of the wind.

It is also mixed how far the countries come in disaster… There is a big difference from even Vietnam to Cambodia to Nepal in that matter. Some countries are making big headway like China, India, Vietnam and Thailand… But it’s too slow. I am frustrated… We are not making faster progress. Science has come so far and there is so much you can predict now.

Q: What are the chief obstacles to linking climate change adaptation and disaster risk management for sustainable poverty reduction?

A: Clearly the explosive growth in the number of natural disasters is one of the biggest obstacles in poverty reduction. We have seen an increase of natural disasters from around a 100 in [the] 1960s to nearly 500 per year in this decade, so it is [a] four- nearly five-fold increase… It means devastation of some of the poorest countries. It means massive displacement of people.

Q: In addition to climate services, what else is still needed to prepare people to adapt to climate variability?

A: We need to curb climate change. Many believe we are in the same boat, [that] we are equally hit by climate change, which is not true… Norway is not going to get hit by climate change for some time. But if you go to Sahel, go to the coast of Southeast Asia and you see… It’s the number of disasters that has increased dramatically… Monsoons and typhoons have grown tremendously.

In Vietnam, they are talking about one metre of sea rise, which would be a complete disaster for the whole Mekong Delta. So we need to curb climate change, and here it is just horrendous to see that it is not happening… In [climate change] adaptation we could be able to do more… Quite a bit is happening… Science is making big progress but not reaching the final point and that’s a big challenge.

rg/pt/cb

source www.irinnews.org

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | Leave a Comment »

“watershed election” ahead

Posted by African Press International on October 14, 2012

A tight race is expected between the ruling APC party and historical rival the SLPP party

FREETOWN,  – Sierra Leone’s international partners and citizens are paying close attention to possible threats to peace ahead of presidential, parliamentary and local elections scheduled for 17 November, which it is hoped will consolidate stability a decade after the end of a civil war and lead to improved living standards.

Campaigns are intensifying, especially between historical rivals the ruling All People’s Congress (APC) party and the Sierra Leone People’s Party (SLPP), now in opposition. These are the country’s third elections since the war was declared over.

“This is a watershed election. It’s an election that will define Sierra Leone as an emerging democracy in this part of the world. If it is free, fair and transparent it will not only enhance our democratic credentials, but will demonstrate that we have stability,” Sulaiman Banja Tejan-Sie, the SLPP secretary-general, told IRIN.

Tejan-Sie, however, accused President Ernest Bai Koroma’s APC of focusing on building roads at the expense of improving the economy, and APC cadres of living opulently amid deep poverty. However, the APC’s Agenda for Change plan (supported by the international community), which seeks to improve agriculture, energy and transport infrastructure and improve living standards, has brought modest progress.

“The main issue in these elections is the economy. They are talking about roads, but I want to wake up in the morning and see that my children have breakfast,” said Tejan-Sie. “Even civil servants who are supposed to be the middle class find it difficult to survive.”

While Sierra Leone has been stable and made progress over the past decade, poverty, unemployment and underdevelopment are widespread. It is ranked 180 out of 187 by the 2011 UN Humanitarian Development Index. Youth unemployment is high at 60 percent, and around 60 percent of its six million people live on less than US$1.25 a day.

The civil war erupted in 1991 when the Revolutionary United Front rebels of ex-army corporal Foday Sankoh took up arms against the government of then president Joseph Momoh. Tens of thousands of people were killed in a decade of brutal conflict.

Corruption

The police, judiciary and other public institutions are poorly staffed and inadequate, seen as lacking independence and corrupt. Transparency International’s 2011 Corruption Perception Index says graft is prevalent.

“State institutions need to maintain their neutrality and independence. As has often been the case these institutions seem to be compromised by the executive,” said Ibrahim Tommy, director of the Centre for Accountability and Rule of Law, a Sierra Leonean activist group.

With Sierra Leonean mineral wealth and the recent discovery of oil, the stakes are high in the November elections, argued Tommy. However, it is difficult to predict who between SLPP candidate Julius Maada Bio and Koroma will win and many observers say it will be a close contest.

Month-long campaigns officially begin on 15 October, but parties have already begun criss-crossing the country seeking support. Ten political parties are contesting the elections in which voters will for the first time choose a president, lawmakers, local councillors and mayors all on the same day throughout the country.

“Politicians come and go. What we want are independent institutions that will protect our democracy, improve our economy, infrastructure, access to good health services and fight corruption,” said Francis Dumbuya, a student. “Our democracy is growing. This particular election is a bridge to a new level.”

Traditional strongholds

APC and SLPP have traditional strongholds which have defined voting patterns. SLPP draws its main support from the southeast and APC from the northwest. The split has at times led to regional rivalry and bias in key government appointments, but observers say there is little indication that this would lead to ethnic violence.

The two parties have also dominated power since Sierra Leone’s independence in 1961. APC has ruled for 29 years and SLPP 16. Military regimes allied to either party ruled for five years.

“I don’t believe that any Sierra Leonean will have the desire to go back to the past and that violence is the solution,” said Berhanemeskel Nega, deputy head of the UN Integrated Peacebuilding Office in Sierra Leone. “The success of these elections will be a reaffirmation that the country is moving in the right direction.”

All the political parties on 18 May signed a deal to ensure peaceful elections and fairness, and refrain from violence. Tension is nonetheless expected to rise as campaigns kick off. The media are largely free, but openly partisan, running headlines and columns favouring one candidate, and disparaging his or her opponent.

Henry Sheku of the Human Rights Commission of Sierra Leone said that although the media have a regulatory body, the uncontrolled social media could be a source of chaos.

Social media are very influential and difficult to regulate. If there is going to be violence then that is where it will start.”

ob/js/cb

source www.irinnews.org

—-

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | Leave a Comment »