Syria Rebels Recruit Teenage Fighters: Rights Group


TEHRAN (Tasnim) - Human Rights Watch on Monday urged Syrian rebel groups to stop enlisting teenagers in their ranks and warned their foreign backers that they could be implicated in “war crimes.”

The New York-based rights watchdog accused rebels of using “children as young as 15 to fight in battles” as they try to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad in a bloody conflict that has lasted more than three years.

Some rebel groups recruit teenagers “under the guise of offering education,” HRW said in the report published on Monday.

Radical groups in Syria, including the powerful jihadist group the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) “have specifically recruited children through free schooling campaigns that include weapons training, and have given them dangerous tasks, including suicide bombing missions.”

The HRW report was based on the experiences of 25 child soldiers- some of whom are still fighting- who were involved in ISIL, the Free Syrian Army (FSA), the Islamic Front, Syria’s Al-Qaeda affiliate the Al-Nusra Front as well as Kurdish forces.

The children interviewed by HRW said they took part in combat, worked as snipers, manned checkpoints, spied, cared for the wounded, or carried munitions or other supplies to the front line.

“Syrian armed groups shouldn’t prey on vulnerable children- who have seen their relatives killed, schools shelled, and communities destroyed- by enlisting them in their forces,” HRW’s Priyanka Motaparthy said.

“The horrors of Syria’s armed conflict are only made worse by throwing children into the front lines.”

The number of child soldiers fighting in the Syrian conflict is unknown, but the Violations Documentation Center, a organisation close to the opposition, reported that 194 “non-civilian” children have been killed since September 2011.

HRW also urged countries supporting the move to press for an end to child recruitment.

“Governments supporting armed groups in Syria need to press these forces to end child recruitment and use of children in combat,” Motaparthy said.

“Anyone providing funding for sending children to war could be complicit in war crimes."