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Special
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The Security
Council's Children Of War |
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I see the world gradually being turned into a wilderness, I
hear the ever-approaching thunder, which will destroy us too, I
can feel the suffering of millions, and yet, if I look up into the
heavens, I think that it will all come right, that this cruelty,
too, will end. Ann Frank (Died in a
Nazi Concentration Camp)
Many of our articles deal with controversial issues that paint a
picture of radicals or tyrant leaders wreaking havoc on the world
or their own people. This article is different. This
article will shed light on how the very body that empowered
themselves at the end of the second world war to ensure future
world peace has created conflict after conflict throughout third
world nations. These conflicts have seen women, children and
the elderly slaughtered in private wars being fueled or secretly
waged from within the Security Council and other wealthy United
Nation members. The United Nations Security council was
established to be the center of power and guardian of peace in the
world. To establish peaceful resolutions rather than face
yet another world war. It gave the five permanent members undue
power based on the fact that they were nuclear nations and
possessed the most powerful militaries of that era. It did
not take long for the United Nations and it's Security Council to
become a wrecking ball to the rest of the planet.
International humanitarian law asserts that children's rights must
be respected during armed conflict but children are often torn
from their families, pressed into serving as soldiers, held in
captivity or simply killed. This does not mention the
devastating results that come into the lives of the surviving
children that grow up with memories or scars from conflicts waged
for profit or ideologies that they are unaware of.
Why Child
Soldiers?
In impoverished third world countries
around the globe children are used as child soldiers in war and
conflicts. There are many reasons that children are ideal
for use as soldiers in these impoverished conflicts.
Children are easily manipulated and coerced compared to their
adult counterparts. Child soldiers are less expensive to
utilize since their salaries if any are paid are much less.
Child soldiers in the majority of cases only receive food and
shelter. In many war torn third world countries child
soldiers are often left with no where else to turn. The fate
of their parents often results in death, missing during refugee
movements or they are unable to provide the basic essentials
including food and water let alone shelter and safety. In
the movement of a refugee crisis children parish often due to
starvation, disease, and butchering militant attacks targeting the
overcrowded refugee camps. In
essence some parents simply give their children to the militia to have a
better chance of survival. They have no where else to turn.
Other children are often just kidnapped during round ups and
forced into militant groups. Many children joined armed
groups in Cambodia in the 1980s as the best way to secure food and
protection. Similarly, in Liberia in 1990, children as young as
seven were seen in combat because, according to the Director of
the Liberian Red Cross, "those with guns could survive."
In the past small children were not
able to carry and operate the heavy and more difficult to load weapons.
Today's weapons such as the Ak-47 assault rifle is light weight,
easily operated, and is a durable killing machine.
Kalashnikov Kids as they are called have proven to be some of the
most deadliest phenomenon of our time. Hundreds of thousands
of these child soldiers are fighting in conflicts throughout
Africa. In simplest terms, child soldiers are used because a bullet is just as
deadly fired from an eight year old as it is from a forty year old
adult.
Since their introduction in 1947, around 55 million AK-47s had
been sold in a study 12 years ago in 1996. In some African
countries an AK-47 can cost as little as $6 each in U.S.
dollars. The M-16 is just as available, and has been
described by one military historian as the "transistor radio of
modern warfare." With deadly weapons so affordable,
available, and dependable combined with conflicts lasting decades
children are essential manpower to continue conflicts.
Equipping them with a six dollar weapon makes it even more
appealing.
Children And War Atrocities
Children suffer in war
in so many ways that it is impossible for those in the West to
contemplate the actions and pain endured in these third world
countries. Rape, murder, torture, slow painful starvation
and so much more is happening to children throughout conflicts in
over 50 countries across the planet according to
a new study conducted by researchers at the University of Utah.
Rape in war is an
especially scarring and traumatic event. In Rwanda,
rape has been systematically used as a weapon of ethnic cleansing
to destroy community ties. In some raids, virtually every
adolescent girl who survived an attack by the militia was
subsequently raped. Many of those who became pregnant were then
ostracized by their families and community; some abandoned their
babies, others committed suicide. Mass rape is an
increasingly sophisticated weapon of war, as used in the
Bosnia-Herzegovina conflict and in other conflicts—such as Haiti,
Georgia (CIS), and Rwanda.
In
fighting in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia, it had been
deliberate policy to rape teenage girls and force them to bear
'the enemy's' child. A European Community fact-finding team
estimated that more than 20,000 Muslim women had been raped in
Bosnia by 1992. It is a fact that a woman born in South
Africa has a greater chance of being raped, than learning how to
read. One in four girls faces the prospect of being raped before
the age of 16 according to the child support group.
Rape and other forms of
sexual violence in Darfur are being used as a weapon of war in
order to humiliate, punish, control, inflict fear and displace
women and their communities. Sudan's Darfur crisis has
exploded on many fronts -- violence, hunger, displacement and
looting -- but United Nations peacekeepers say the biggest issue
now affecting the region is the systematic rape of women and
children. Thousands of women as young as 4 caught in the
middle of the struggle between rebel forces and government-backed
Arab militias have become victims of rape.
A disturbing cases of lost children has emerged in the civil war
in southern Sudan. Apart from the main government and opposition
groups, there are also various militias that spread terror by
pillaging villages and killing or seizing their inhabitants.
Fearing capture or death, at least 20,000 Sudanese young people,
mostly boys between the ages of 7 and 17, have fled their homes.
Thousands of girls have also been killed or abducted by the
raiders, but few have run away from their villages since it is
more difficult for girls to envisage life outside their families.
These 'lost boys' of the Sudan have been trekking enormous
distances over a vast unforgiving wilderness, seeking refuge from
the fighting. Hungry, frightened and weakened by sleeplessness and
disease, they have crossed from the Sudan into Ethiopia and back.
Many have died on the journey; most survivors are now in camps in
the parched north-western plains of Kenya.
The
UN and Security Council Are To Blame
Now that we have established that the world that we live in is not
only allowing horrible atrocities to be inflicted upon children,
but it is the role that members of the UN Security council members
are actually providing the weaponry and financing of the
injustices that is ignored. Of all the the items that the UN
should be concerned with no other crime is as unacceptable as
those committed against children. Why does the Media not
openly embarrass the members for their roles in these conflicts.
Land Mines
Of all the weapons that have used over the years
of war, few are more persistent and more lethal to children than land
mines . Hundreds of thousands of children, herding animals, planting
crops or just playing too far away from their home have been killed or
maimed by these deadly devices. During the Persian Gulf war, the US
and its allies laid about 1 million mines along the Iraq-Kuwait border
and around the Iraqi city of Basra. And some 3 million were laid in
the Balkan war. Some of the largest numbers lie in wait in Africa and
Asia. The countries most devastated by land-mines are probably
Afghanistan, Angola and Cambodia. Afghanistan has an estimated 10-15
million mines in place. The United Nations says there are more
than 110 million landmines planted in more than 70 countries around
the world. The UN estimates that someone is killed by a landmine every
20 minutes. Countries that manufacture landmines include:
Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, China, Czech Republic,
France, Germany, Hungary, India, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands,
North Korea, Pakistan, Portugal, Russia, South Africa, Spain,
U.K., U.S., Vietnam and Zimbabwe. If you notice all five
UN Security Council members are on the list of producers.
China: Africa's
Dealer of Death
The Automat Kalashnikov, or AK-47, reigns
supreme. It's the durable, cheap, usually lethal, Cold War icon of the
Soviet bloc and resistance movements across the world. The gun's
familiar silhouette -- easily identified by the banana-shaped magazine
-- has appeared on Mozambique's flag, Palestinian currency and Russian
vodka. An estimated 100 million have been produced in hundreds of
factories in dozens of countries during its 60-year history. The
original was a Russian made weapon but China has flooded Africa with
the weapon that has a life span of decades. U.N. stockpiles of
captured weapons usually contain a majority of Kalashnikovs
manufactured in China. China supports two of the most deadliest
and human rights violators in the world in Sudan and Zimbabwe.
In China's quest for resources to feed their new gigantic growing
economy the need for oil and other precious resources necessary for
driving the China machine into the new century. Africa is full
of two things: resources and corruption. China is using
both to create opportunity for it's economy. From Nigeria in the
north, to Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and Angola in the west, across Chad
and Sudan in the east, and south through Zambia, Zimbabwe and
Mozambique, China has seized a vice-like grip on a continent which
officials have decided is crucial to the superpower's long-term
survival. there is a lethal price to pay. There is a sinister aspect
to this invasion. Chinese-made war planes roar through the African
sky, bombing opponents. Chinese-made assault rifles and grenades are
being used to fuel countless murderous civil wars, often over the
materials the Chinese are desperate to buy. Recently, a giant
container ship from China was due to deliver its cargo of three
million rounds of AK-47 ammunition, 3,000 rocket-propelled grenades
and 1,500 mortars to President Robert Mugabe's regime in Zimbabwe in
the wake of the disputed election in the country that is creating a
crisis among supporters and opponents to the government dictatorship
of Zimbabwe. In Darfur, China is supplying the Sudanese
government whose
President Omar al-Bashir was
recently charged by the International Court With Genocide in
Darfur.
China has much to gain by the
conflicts in Darfur and other hot spots in Africa. The Chinese -
who now buy half of all Sudan's oil - have happily provided armored
vehicles, aircraft and millions of bullets and grenades in return for
lucrative deals. China has repeatedly thwarted United Nations
denunciations of the Sudanese regime.
The United States,
Russia and United Kingdom's Weapons Foot Print
The United States maintained its role as
the leading supplier of weapons to the developing world in 2006,
followed by Russia and Britain, according to a Congressional study.
Pakistan, India and Saudi Arabia were the top buyers of weapons
products. In 2006, the United States agreed to sell $10.3
billion in weapons to the developing world, or 35.8 percent of these
deals worldwide.
The United States has been under pressure
as of late for their use of depleted uranium ammunitions that are
suspected of causing cancer in children as well as the use of cluster
bombs. Cluster bombs are indiscriminate in that they maim and
kill people over a large area. Additionally, a small percentage of the
bomblets – often estimated at around 7% to 10%, depending on the type
– fail to detonate on hitting the ground. They can be accidentally
triggered by civilians years later. The bomblets are often brightly
colored, making them attractive for children to pick up.
Russia has been a
major supplier of weapons to Iran in past years - including a $700
million deal for surface-to air-missiles in 2005.
Russian agreements with Venezuela in 2006 included the sale of
two-dozen Su-30 fighter aircraft valued at more than $1 billion, along
with attack and transport helicopters valued at more than $700
million. Russia also sold Venezuela a large number of AK-series
assault rifles in a deal that included a pledge to build a factory in
Venezuela to produce those rifles and bullets, together valued at more
than $500 million
The Members of the Security Council has used war to sway their
influence upon third world countries rich in untapped resources.
These activities have resulted in decades of war in Africa,
Afghanistan, the Middle East, South and Central America, Eastern
Europe and Asia. The United States, France, Russia, U.K. and
China have waged secret wars through creating markets for their
weapons, for the gain of influence with dictators to exploit
resources, as well as blatant secret wars against one another as in
Afghanistan during the Soviet occupation and more than likely the with
the current American occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan. In
efforts to open up new economic markets and to complete strategic
defense objectives these countries have backed ruthless and oppressing
regimes throughout the world. They have all used the U.N.
Security council to block action against their interests even though
millions of lives have been fuelled by their growing needs. As
competition for world resources have escalated and is expected to
continue in demand, the future will produce more conflicts.
The result of this embarrassing
activities is resulting in the creation of the types of conflicts that
we have described earlier in places such as Darfur, Afghanistan,
Sierra Leone, Somalia, the Congo, and a host of other venues.
Children are bearing the brunt of this greed where the price is too
high in consequences to their existence. As long the Security
Council continues to fund and arm conflicts around the globe there
will be ethnic cleansing, systematic raping of women and children,
child soldiers and all the atrocities that war can bring to the weak ,
poor and hungry of the third world.
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