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Colombia’s FARC rebels agree to release child soldiers

Child soldiers


FARC guerillas listen to a talk about the peace process in Colombia

Colombia’s government and leftistFARC rebels have agreed to a roadmap for children under 15to leave guerilla encampments and re-integrate into civilsociety, as part of negotiations aimed at ending Latin America’slongest war.

The accord is a first step towards all minors leaving rebelranks, the two sides said in a joint statement read out at anews conference in Havana, where they have been negotiating apeace deal for more than three years.

The FARC has long been accused by the government and humanrights groups of using child solders as cannon fodder.

The rebel group announced last year it would stop recruitingminors but no deal was reached on handling teenagers andchildren already in its ranks.

“The deal foresees the FARC handing over informationnecessary to identify and locate the minors still in these campsand collaborating with (their) exit,” the government’s topnegotiator Humberto de la Calle said.

Leila Zerrougui, the, stressed the importance of getting former child soldiers back into education when she attended the news conference in Cuba.

She said: “Proper family and community reintegration programmes for children formerly associated with armed groups that ensure their protection is an absolutely vital piece of the puzzle.

“Without that, there is a heightened risk of these children being re-recruited by other armed groups, which is destabilising for them but also for society as a whole.

“To make peace truly sustainable, children not only need to be given psychosocial and physical support but also real opportunities to become peaceful, active members of society.

A boy plays in the rubble of a house destroyed by FARC

“For all children education is key and for older children this is often vocational training – and I am very pleased to see this as part of the agreement.”

The drug-fuelled civil war in Colombia has killed some220,000 people and displaced millions of others since 1964.

The FARC’s forces are estimated at 8000 guerrillas but itis not known how many might be minors. The group said yesterday there were 21 children under 15 among its ranks.

“We have agreed with the national government that theseminors cannot be prosecuted and that, as victims of an immensesocial and political drama, they will be treated as such andnever as criminals,” FARC lead negotiator Ivan Marquez said.

Under the terms of the deal, the United Nations children’s agency and the willoversee the procedure to ensure both sides stick to theirpromises.

All the illegal armed groups in Colombia – rebels andright-wing paramilitaries, along with criminal gangs – haveforcibly recruited teenagers or taken on under-age volunteers,especially in remote rural areas with few job opportunities.

The groups use children as messengers, informants, cooks andporters. FARC rebels also trained them to use weapons, grenadesand mortars and to plant home-made landmines.

Marquez said the FARC had never recruited minors under 15 but many had arrived orphaned by paramilitary violence orfleeing from “mistreatment and the absence of a future.”

Poverty and famine among Colombia’s youth was a greaterproblem than the existence of minors in FARC camps, he added.

A deadline for a final peace deal was missed in March, butColombian President Juan Manuel Santos said last Wednesday hisgovernment hoped to conclude a peace deal with the FARC rebels“in the very near future”.

The , the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, covers humanitarian news, women’s rights, corruption and climate change.


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