|
 |
| |
|
| |
Ratification
of Convention on Child Rights Sought
Islamabad: SPARC has urged the
government to ratify the 'Optional Protocol to
the Convention on the Rights of the Child' on
preventing involving children in armed conflicts,
according to a news release issued on July 24.
It said that two recent incidents —May
12 carnage in Karachi and Lal Masjid in Islamabad—
were a proof that children were being recruited
by organizations for armed conflicts that train
and prepare them for military action and conflicts.
The intensive coverage of the May 12 carnage in
Karachi showed that youth and children, as young
as 15 years old, were given arms and used as a
shield for political conflict. The Lal Masjid
incident has highlighted the continuing use of
children by madressas. In February 2000, Pakistan's
interior minister had claimed that only "one
per cent" of madressas in Pakistan sent their
students for military training in Afghanistan.
Though there are no reliable statistics on the
subject, the UN Committee on the Rights of the
Child in October 2003 urged Pakistan to take effective
measures to ensure that children below the age
of 18 years were not involved in hostilities.
It recommended that the government develop a comprehensive
system for the reintegration and recovery of children
who have participated in hostilities, in collaboration
with non- governmental and international organizations.
Pakistan is among the few countries which despite
being signatories to the UN Convention on the
Rights of the Child and signing the protocol in
September 2001, has still not ratified the protocol.
India, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan and Bangladesh have
ratified the protocol.
Article 38 of the Convention specifies 15 years
as the minimum age for recruitment into a state's
armed forces and calls on the states to, "take
all feasible measures to ensure that persons who
have not attained the age of 15 years do not take
a direct part in hostilities." 'The Optional
Protocol to the CRC about Children in Armed Conflict'
was declared in 2001. It did not compulsorily
raise this age of 15 as the minimum recruitment
age for a state's armed forces. It, however, did
declare the minimum age of recruitment into "armed
groups" as 18.
SPARC demands from the government of Pakistan
to ratify the Optional Protocol immediately, without
reservations and take effective steps to criminalize
underage recruitment by non-state actors and prosecute
those found responsible.
|
| |
|
| |
Home |
|
 |
|
|