Advancing Human Rights
The Child Soldier: US WILPF and the US Government
Memorial Day, 2008
The Child Soldier: US WILPF and the US Government DAY ONE: Could any of us have imagined this face-off over the child soldier issue six years ago? At the same time, within this treaty review process, US democracy has seemed to awaken. In this scenario, the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, based in Geneva Switzerland, called on the US government to testify before the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child. This periodical formal question and answer also occurs with other countries who signed the UN Convention on the Child that the US has not signed. But it did write and sign the Optional Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict. read more ...
Submitted by organic on 20 June 2008 - 11:11pm.
WILPF to United Nations: Stop Military Recruitment in US schools!Updated: 3/13/08 On February 7, Advancing Human Rights committee member Tzili Mor addressed the U.N. Committee on the Rights of the Child in Geneva regarding U.S. violations of the Optional Protocol on Children in Armed Conflict: "The nearly 14,000 boys and girls who actually sign up for military service represent only a tiny fraction of the youths targeted annually by military recruiters who have become an ominous presence in elementary schools, junior and high schools across the country where students as young as 11 can participate in Cadet and Training Corps. These are military funded school programs in which military instructors teach students about uniform inspection and drills (including ones using wooden guns or real firearms for the high school kids). Even younger children are also allowed to attend the programs because they have older siblings in the program and they would otherwise have to walk home alone. read more ...
Submitted by organic on 13 March 2008 - 7:14pm.
Statement to the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, February 7, 2008.Statement to the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child regarding U.S. Compliance with CRC OPAC Statement made by Tzili Mor to the CRC on behalf of WILPF Click here to view this statement as a pdf document. Update: 2008-02-22 Thank you for this opportunity to give voice to the experiences and concerns of members of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom in the U.S. and their allies in 30 US-based national and local grass roots organizations who are similarly engaged in peace education and advocacy on behalf of the human rights of children. In its report to this committee, the U.S. Government fails to define what constitutes "recruitment", and even suggests that recruitment is limited to the act of a person signing the enlistment contract. The report ignores the concerted, targeted actions taken by military recruiters, including unchecked aggressive advertising, extravagant gift giving, and false promises of benefits and harassment of pre teens and teenagers that had to take place in order to achieve this result. In 2006, the U.S. Department of Defense spent 1.5 billion dollars on military recruitment, with half of this sum used for advertising alone. Military recruitment is a process that starts long before the contract is actually signed.
read more ...
Submitted by organic on 22 February 2008 - 2:10pm.
Peace Tables ToolkitThe Women’s Peace Table was created in the spirit U.N. Security Council Resolution 1325. Expanding on the Platform for Action that was established in Beijing in 1995, our goal is to weave the priorities of diverse women's organizations and communities across the U.S. into a single harmonized agenda for action: a prioritized list of policy changes and good practices that will prevent the U.S. from initiating and fueling future armed conflicts. Throughout the history of WILPF, the women in our organization have worked to create an environment of political, economic, social and psychological freedom for all members of the human community, so that true peace can be enjoyed by all. It is important that WILPF's efforts to be aligned with those of other women's organizations and communities so that U.S. women can develop a proactive peace movement that is resilient and unstoppable. read more ...
Submitted by wilpf on 9 November 2007 - 12:22pm.
Join WILPF at the Commission on the Status of Women February/March 2008 in New York Updated: 2008-02-22 The WILPF-UN Office in New York welcomes WILPF members to come to New York City to participate in the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) taking place 25 February - 7 March 2008. This year's main theme on which governments will negotiate policy is: We look forward to welcoming delegates to attend the Commission, participate in WILPF's advocacy with governments around the CSW themes and to be involved in the various side events taking place. read more ...
Submitted by wilpf on 30 October 2007 - 5:13pm.
Going beyond “counter recruitment” strategies to End Abusive and Improper Military RecruitmentUpdated: 2008-02-22 Going beyond “counter recruitment” strategies to End Abusive and Improper Military Recruitment In 2004 – according to the latest available statistics from the Under Secretary of Defense – about 19,885 seventeen year old children joined the US armed forces, constituting 23% of all new reserves and 4.3% of active armed forces recruits. These 14,933 boys and 4,952 girls represent a fraction of the youths targeted annually by military recruiters who have become an ominous presence in elementary schools across the country where students as young as 11 can participate in the Middle School Cadet Corps. read more ...
Submitted by wilpf on 5 October 2007 - 10:31am.
Going beyond “counter recruitment” strategies to End Abusive and Improper Military RecruitmentGoing beyond “counter recruitment” strategies to End Abusive and Improper Military Recruitment In 2004 – according to the latest available statistics from the Under Secretary of Defense – about 19,885 seventeen year old children joined the US armed forces, constituting 23% of all new reserves and 4.3% of active armed forces recruits. These 14,933 boys and 4,952 girls represent a fraction of the youths targeted annually by military recruiters who have become an ominous presence in elementary schools across the country where students as young as 11 can participate in the Middle School Cadet Corps. read more ...
Submitted by wilpf on 9 August 2007 - 3:45pm.
Improper and abusive military recruitment of minors: a human rights issueChildren’s Human Rights and Military Service While the exact numbers of child soldiers is difficult to pinpoint at any given time, the visibility of such combatants in recent conflicts in Burma and sub-Saharan Africa, and in training schools run by Al-Queda in Pakistan, has focused world attention on the human rights abuses inherent in such practices. Most child soldiers are aged between 14 and 18. While many enlist "voluntarily" research shows that such adolescents see few alternatives to involvement in armed conflict. Some enlist as a means of survival in war-torn regions after family, social and economic structures collapse or after seeing family members tortured or killed by government forces or armed groups. Others join up because of poverty and lack of work or educational opportunities. Regardless of how they are recruited, child soldiers are victims, whose participation in conflict bears serious implications for their physical and emotional well-being. They are commonly subject to abuse and most of them witness death, killing, and sexual violence. Many participate in killings and most suffer serious long-term psychological consequences.1 read more ...
Submitted by wilpf on 9 August 2007 - 3:24pm.
Domesticating Security Council Resolution 1325 Together We Can Do It!
|
Recent blog posts
Search |