Myanmar’s
military released 53 children and young people from service on Monday as part
of an effort to rid its ranks of underage soldiers. Human rights groups have
long accused Myanmar’s military, known as the Tatmadaw, of abuses such as using
child soldiers, forcibly recruiting conscripts and confiscating land.
Since the military handed power to a semi-civilian government in 2011,
it has taken some steps to professionalize the armed forces, including the
release of soldiers recruited while under the age of 18.
“Today’s release is the result of continued efforts of the Government of
Myanmar and the Tatmadaw to put an end to the harmful practice of recruiting
and using children,” said Renata Lok-Dessallien, the UN Resident and
Humanitarian Coordinator in Myanmar, in a statement.
“I am delighted to see these children and young people returning to
their homes and families. We are hopeful that institutional checks that have
been put in place and continued efforts will ensure that recruitment of
children will exist no more.”
The military has released 146 underage recruits this year and 699 since
it signed a joint action plan with the UN in 2012 to end the use of children in
the military.
The UN said it had no estimate for the number of underage soldiers in
Myanmar. Experts believe Myanmar’s military to be between 300,000 and 350,000
strong, but the military does not release data on its size.
Lok-Dessallien also called on armed ethnic groups to stop recruiting
child soldiers.
The UN Secretary-General has listed seven such groups as being
“persistent perpetrators” in the recruitment and use of children in their
operations.
They include the powerful Kachin Independence Army, which controls large
swathes of Myanmar’s northern Kachin State, and the United Wa State Army
(UWSA). Operating on the Myanmar-China border, the UWSA is regarded as the
largest and best equipped of Myanmar’s armed ethnic groups.
The announcement of the release comes amid fighting between the military
and ethnic groups in the eastern Shan State, as well as in Kachin.
Activists from Shan State last week accused the military of bombing
schools and Buddhist temples, firing on civilians and raping women during its
recent offensives.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs estimates
that up to 6,000 people have been displaced by the fighting in Shan and another
1,200, including 500 children, in Kachin. Reuters
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