Home > 106th Congressional Bills > H.Con.Res. 348 (ih) Expressing condemnation of the use of children as soldiers and expressing the belief that the United States should support and, where possible, lead efforts to end this abuse of human rights. [Introduced in House] ...H.Con.Res. 348 (ih) Expressing condemnation of the use of children as soldiers and expressing the belief that the United States should support and, where possible, lead efforts to end this abuse of human rights. [Introduced in House] ...
106th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. CON. RES. 348
_______________________________________________________________________
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
Expressing condemnation of the use of children as soldiers and
expressing the belief that the United States should support and, where
possible, lead efforts to end this abuse of human rights.
106th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. CON. RES. 348
_______________________________________________________________________
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
Whereas in the year 2000 approximately 300,000 individuals under the age of 18
are participating in armed conflict in more than 30 countries worldwide;
Whereas many of these children are forcibly conscripted through kidnaping or
coercion, while others join military units due to economic necessity, to
avenge the loss of a family member, or for their own personal safety;
Whereas many military commanders frequently force child soldiers to commit
gruesome acts of ritual killings or torture against their enemies,
including against other children;
Whereas many military commanders separate children from their families in order
to foster dependence on military units and leaders, leaving children
vulnerable to manipulation, deep traumatization, and in need of
psychological counseling and rehabilitation;
Whereas child soldiers are exposed to hazardous conditions and risk physical
injuries, sexually transmitted diseases, malnutrition, deformed backs
and shoulders from carrying overweight loads, and respiratory and skin
infections;
Whereas many young female soldiers face the additional psychological and
physical horrors of rape and sexual abuse, being enslaved for sexual
purposes by militia commanders, and forced to endure severe social
stigma should they return home;
Whereas children in northern Uganda continue to be kidnaped by the Lord's
Resistance Army (LRA) which is supported and funded by the Government of
Sudan and which has committed and continues to commit gross human rights
violations in Uganda;
Whereas children in Sri Lanka have been forcibly recruited by the opposition
Tamil Tigers movement and forced to kill or be killed in the armed
conflict in that country;
Whereas an estimated 7,000 child soldiers have been involved in the conflict in
Sierra Leone, some as young as age 10, with many being forced to commit
extrajudicial executions, torture, rape, and amputations for the rebel
Revolutionary United Front;
Whereas on January 21, 2000, in Geneva, a United Nations Working Group,
including representatives from more than 80 governments including the
United States, reached consensus on an optional protocol on the use of
child soldiers;
Whereas this optional protocol will raise the international minimum age for
conscription to age 18 and will require governments to take all feasible
measures to ensure that members of their armed forces under the age of
18 do not participate directly in combat, prohibit the recruitment and
use in armed conflict of persons under the age of 18 by nongovernmental
armed forces, encourage governments to raise the minimum legal age for
voluntary recruits above the current standard of 15 and, commits
governments to support the demobilization and rehabilitation of child
soldiers, and when possible, to allocate resources to this purpose;
Whereas on October 29, 1998, United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan set
minimum age requirements for United Nations peacekeeping personnel that
are made available by member nations of the United Nations;
Whereas the participating States of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, in the 1999 Charter for European Security signed
in Istanbul, Turkey, committed themselves to ``develop and implement
measures to promote the rights and interests of children in armed
conflict and postconflict situations, including refugees and internally
displaced children'' and to ``look at ways of preventing forced or
compulsory recruitment for use in armed conflict of persons under 18
years of age'';
Whereas United Nations Under-Secretary General for Peace-keeping, Bernard Miyet,
announced in the Fourth Committee of the General Assembly that
contributing governments of member nations were asked not to send
civilian police and military observers under the age of 25, and that
troops in national contingents should preferably be at least 21 years of
age but in no case should they be younger than 18 years of age;
Whereas on August 25, 1999, the United Nations Security Council unanimously
passed Resolution 1261 (1999) condemning the use of children in armed
conflicts;
Whereas in addressing the Security Council, the Special Representative of the
Secretary General for Children and Armed Conflict, Olara Otunnu, urged
the adoption of a global three-pronged approach to combat the use of
children in armed conflict, first to raise the age limit for recruitment
and participation in armed conflict from the present age of 15 to the
age of 18, second, to increase international pressure on armed groups
which currently abuse children, and third to address the political,
social, and economic factors which create an environment where children
are induced by appeal of ideology or by socio-economic collapse to
become child soldiers;
Whereas the United States delegation to the United Nations working group
relating to child soldiers, which included representatives from the
Department of Defense, supported the Geneva agreement on the optional
protocol;
Whereas on May 25, 2000, the United Nations General Assembly unanimously adopted
the optional protocol on the use of child soldiers;
Whereas the optional protocol was opened for signature on June 5, 2000; and
Whereas President Clinton has publicly announced his support of the optional
protocol and a speedy process of review and signature: Now, therefore,
be it
Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring),
That--
(1) the Congress joins the international community in--
(A) condemning the use of children as soldiers by
governmental and nongovernmental armed forces
worldwide;
(B) welcoming the optional protocol as a critical
first step in ending the use of children as soldiers;
and
(C) applauding the decision by the United States
Government to support the protocol;
(2) it is the sense of the Congress that--
(A) President Clinton should be commended for
signing the optional protocol and should consult
closely with the Senate with the objective of building
support for this protocol;
(B) the President and the Congress should work
together to enact a law that establishes a fund for the
rehabilitation and reintegration into society of child
soldiers; and
(C) the Departments of State and Defense should
undertake all possible efforts to persuade and
encourage other governments to ratify and endorse the
new optional protocol on the use of child soldiers.
Passed the House of Representatives July 11, 2000.
Attest:
Clerk.
Pages: 1 Other Popular 106th Congressional Bills Documents:
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