Child Soldiers in Sri Lanka
* The LTTE has used children as soldiers throughout the conflict from
1983 to 2002. In the 1990s some studies found that 40-60 per cent of
LTTE soldiers killed in battle were children under the age of eighteen.
Children have also been used as suicide bombers.
* The LTTE has continued to recruit children even after active
fighting ended in 2002. UNICEF has documented over 3,500 new cases of
child recruitment by the LTTE during the ceasefire. The true total may
be much higher.
* Some children are forced or coerced to join. The LTTE often
pressures Tamil families to provide a son or daughter for "the cause."
When families refuse, they may be harassed or threatened, and the
children taken by force.
* Children in the LTTE receive rigorous and sometimes brutal
training. Children who try to escape are typically beaten in front of
their entire unit as a warning to others.
* Children are typically 14 or 15 years old when they are recruited,
though some are as young as 11. Over 40% of the LTTE's child soldiers
are girls.
* In June 2003, the LTTE signed an Action Plan for Children Affected
by War and agreed to end its recruitment of child soldiers and to
release children from its forces. Between signing the plan and November
2004, the LTTE released 831 children, but recruited or re-recruited
1,700 more.
* International law sets 18 as the minimum age for all participation
in hostilities, all forced recruitment or conscription, and all
recruitment by non-state armed groups. Any recruitment or use of
children under the age of fifteen is considered a war crime.
Extracted from the Human Rights Watch Fact Sheet on Child Soldiers in
Sri Lanka |