Archive for April, 2007

John Walker Lindh Petitions for Lesser Sentence.

Wednesday, April 4th, 2007

(AP) SAN FRANCISCO The lawyer and parents of John Walker Lindh, the American-born Taliban soldier serving 20 years in prison after his capture in Afghanistan, called on President Bush on Wednesday to commute his sentence and set him free.

Bosnian Serb Sentenced in War Crimes Tribunal

Wednesday, April 4th, 2007

THE HAGUE (Reuters) - Former Bosnian Serb policeman Dragan Zelenovic was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment by the U.N. war crimes tribunal on Wednesday, after he pleaded guilty to the rape and torture of Bosnian Muslims in the 1992-1995 war.

Zelenovic, a 46-year-old former paramilitary leader, was indicted in 1996 for atrocities committed against non-Serbs in his native Foca region, southeast of Sarajevo, including the gang rape of a 15-year-old girl.

Full story here.

UN Upholds War Crimes Conviction of Bosnian Leader

Tuesday, April 3rd, 2007

The Associated Press: April 3, 2007

THE HAGUE, Netherlands: An appeals court of the U.N. Yugoslav tribunal on Tuesday cut two years from the 32-year prison sentence of a Bosnian Serb political leader, upholding all but a few clauses of his conviction for pursuing a campaign of ethnic cleansing in northwest Bosnia.

Radislav Brdjanin, 59, headed the wartime political leadership of the self-declared Serbian autonomous region of Krajina at the start of the 1992-95 Bosnian war.

Full article here.

Supreme Court Denies Appeal in Detainee Cases.

Monday, April 2nd, 2007

The Supreme Court today denied appeals from several cases filed by detainees held in the US detention facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.  The Court stated that detainees no longer have the right to file a habeas petition.  The Military Commissions Act (MCA) of 2006 stripped access to the Great Writ.  The Court passed in order to allow all available review processes, including remedies available in the Detainee Treatment Act of 2006 and the MCA, to proceed.   The Court has opted to wait for review by the US Court of Appeals in DC before further examining the cases.  This solidifies the legislation enacted by the MCA, including the habeas suspension, and leaves detainees to face review by military commission.

SCOTUSblog has extensive analysis here, here, and here.

Bloomberg has coverage here.

African Union Peacekeepers Killed in Darfur.

Monday, April 2nd, 2007

Five African Union (AU) soldiers participating in the peacekeeping effort in Darfur were killed near the border with Chad today.  It is unclear which group was responsible for the attack.  It is the heaviest lose for the AU since being deployed to the region in 2004.  More reporting on this issue as it develops.

BBC broke the news here.

Child Soldiers: A Timeless Struggle

Monday, April 2nd, 2007

The Sacred Band of Thebes was an elite combat force in the ancient Greek city of Thebes. Soldiers were chosen from the citizen army and housed, and trained at the city’s expense. The soldiers consisted of pedastric couples that consisted of an adult male and an adolescent boy. It was believed that lovers “would be ready to die a thousand deaths”<!–[if !supportFootnotes]–><!–[endif]–> rather than face defeat.

david-head-goliath.jpgThe First Book of Samuel tells the story of a Philistine attack against the Israelites in the Valley of Elah. The Philistine champion, Goliath, taunted the Israelites to send a man to defeat him, or become subjects of the Philistine army. David, who would later be King, conscripted himself to fight the Philistine Goliath. David entered into battle with no armor or weapon, other than a sling, as there was no suitable accommodation for a child. The story alleges that David emerged victories from the battle, triumphantly beheading Goliath. David’s age at the time is believed to be around fifteen.

Drummer boys, often younger than fourteen, were used in combat to set the pace for military advancement into theater. Accounts of the Battle of Waterloo depict French drummer boys leading Napoleon’s army into battle, only to meet Allied gunners at the frontlines. The traditional choral of Young Edward tells the story of a young drummer boy who meets his death in the Battle of Waterloo;

We laid his head upon his drum
Beneath the moon like mournful dew,
The night was still, the battle hummed,
We dug his grave at Waterloo

Developments in international law have modernized dictums regarding the age of conscription and the general rights of children. The Geneva Conventions, adopted in 1977, assure in Protocol I, Article 77, Section 2 that all parties to conflict guarantee that “children who have not attained the age of fifteen years do not take a direct part in hostilities and, in particular, they shall refrain from recruiting them into their armed forces.”<!–[endif]–> The United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) outlines the Convention on the Rights of a Child, which echo the provisions of the Geneva Conventions. The Cape Town Principles adopted in 1997, through the efforts of UNICEF, formally rose the age of conscription to the age of eighteen. The Cape Town Principles “recommend actions to be taken by governments and communities in affected countries to end this violation of children’s rights.” Finally, in February, 2007, representatives of 58 countries gathered in Paris at the behest of UNICEF in order to urge “concrete action on the ground that protects children from recruitment and supports those already recruited to overcome their experiences and reenter their communities.”<!–[endif]–>

According to Peter W. Singer, Senior Fellow at The Brookings Institute, the occurrence of child soldiers is far more prolific than typically conceived. Dr. Singer states that child soldiers “serve in 40% of the world’s armed forces, rebel groups, and terrorist organizations and fight in almost 75% of the worlds conflicts.” Dr. Singer notes in his book, Children at War, that children as young as ten-years of age are typically coerced into armed conflict by militant groups in Southeast Asia and Central Africa. The youngest child highlighted by Dr. Singer was an armed five-year old in Uganda.

Child soldiers are often abducted by militant forces and put into forced labor before beginning armed combat. They are often seen as serving a tactical advantage, as the value of life placed upon a child is high. For example, in mid March, 2007, US forces allowed a car to pass a check point with children in the backseat. The children were later left in the car as it was detonated by Iraqi insurgents. Regarding combat, children are typically drugged to inhibit reluctance and induced to continue service through various propaganda techniques, such as fear and family vengeance.

blurb200_lg.jpgLos Angeles Times photographer, Francis Orr has highlighted the atrocities committed by child soldiers in the Lords Resistance Army (LRA) in Uganda. Ms. Orr reported from Uganda between 2003 and 2005. Her photo essays depict the horrific acts committed by child soldiers of the LRA. In an August 9th, 2005 interview with NPR, Ms. Orr describes how the LRA abducted some 30-40,000 children, using the boys as soldiers and the girls as sex slaves. Her story highlights how the LRA would use the tactic of “cutting” to punish transgressors. Ms. Orr relays the account of Lokeria Aciro. Lokeria had tried to escape the LRA on foot. When she was captured, she had her lips and ears cut off by an eleven year old boy.

Red Hand Day is February 12th. It is an annual commemoration initiated in 2002 at the invocation of the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict. Its purpose is a call to action to end the atrocity of child abuse in its most extreme form. The use of child soldiers is a horrific violation of humanity. Its employment is historic, long, and insufferable. Unfortunately, the story continues.

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