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PEOPLES
REPUBLIC OF BANGLADESHPOPULATION:
126,947,000 total, 55, 733,000 under-18s
GOVERNMENT ARMED FORCES: 137,000 active, 55,200
paramilitary
COMPULSORY RECRUITMENT AGE: no conscription
VOLUNTARY RECRUITMENT AGE: 16
VOTING AGE (GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS): 18
CHILD SOLDIERS: indicated - some 3 % of government
armed
forces are under 18 (3,374 in 1999);[1] children
are also used by
armed opposition groups and criminal gangs.
CRC-OP-CAC: signed 6 September 2000; ratified
6 September 2000;
does not support "straight-18" position.
OTHER TREATIES RATIFIED: CRC; GC/API+II.
Although
Bangladesh was one of the first countries
to ratify the Optional Protocol, there are
indications of children active in
government forces as the minimum age for recruitment
is only 16.The increasing criminalisation
and militarisation of Bangladeshi children
and the proliferation of small arms in the
country is a matter of concern.
Context
Since 1976, indigenous peoples known as the
Jumma in the Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT)
in south-eastern Bangladesh have been in conflict
with Bengali settlers and the Bangladeshi
security forces.[2] A peace treaty was signed
in December 1997 but implementation has proved
slow and problematic and sporadic violence
continues. There are a number of other armed
groups operating in Bangladesh including groups
from neighbouring countries.
Government
National
Recruitment Legislation Conscription has never
existed in Bangladesh, although the 1952 Bangladesh
Army Act reportedly allows for its introduction.[3]
According to information provided by the government,
the minimum legal enlistment age in the Army
is 16 years for soldiers and 17 years for
cadet officers; in the Navy, 17 years for
seamen and 16 years for
cadet officers; in the Air Force, 16 years
for both airmen and cadet officers.[4] At
the Asia-Pacific Conference on the Use of
Children as Soldiers in Kathmandu in May 2000,
the Bangladeshi Government representative
stated: "At present, the minimum age
of recruitment is 16 with parental consent.
However, after recruitment, servicemen and
officers undergo
a period of training varying from six months
to two years." [5] Officer candidates
attend a two-year officer-training course
at the Bangladesh Military Academy at Bhatiary
near Chittagong.[6] Voluntary applications
to join the armed forces are believed to be
sufficient usually to achieve the requisite
number of recruits. [7]
Child recruitment
It is difficult to obtain information about
the total number of under 18 year olds in
the armed forces. An estimated 3 per cent
of personnel in the armed forces are under
eighteen. Figures for 1999 show that there
were 3374 recruits under 18 in the armed forces.[8]
Other sources point out however that there
are only a small number of children under
18 actually serving as soldiers. Officers,
because of the length of training, would be
over 18 by the time they graduate. [9]
Military training and military schools
:
Military training involves 6 months in a training
centre and 2 to 3 months in the respective
unit or regiment. Under 18 year old recruits
undergo the same training and on completion
are required to perform duties like other
soldiers. Recruits are not considered part
of the armed forces until they have completed
training.[10] According to NGO sources, young
people can join a Cadet College after completing
6th grade for education from 7th up to 12th
grade. There are reportedly 10 such cadet
colleges in Bangladesh, one exclusively for
girls. Students follow the national curriculum
but also receive military training. This training
is voluntary and is restricted to elementary
level only. After completing their studies,
students are not obliged to join the army
but generally do so.[11]
Opposition
Shanti
Bahini (Peace Force) was created in 1972 after
the independence of Bangladesh, initially
as a political organisation (Jana Samhati
Samiti). Its aims were to obtain greater autonomy
for the CHT, the withdrawal of the Bangladesh
Armed Forces, and the expulsion of the 400,000
Muslim Bengalis who had moved into the region.
The Shanti Bahini was reportedly formally
abolished in 1999 in the wake of the CHT peace
settlement. Child soldiers have clearly participated
in this conflict but few details are available.
A report from 1997 asserted that "Jumma
children have been tortured, forced to watch
the torture of their parents, and forced to
participate in torture," [12] but it
is unclear if these activities were carried
out within the
framework of Shanti Bahini activities or those
of other groups.There are a range of other
non-state actors active in the country, many
of whom are believed to use children in armed
activities. These include the armed cadres
of political groups such as the UPDF in Chittagong,
the mainstream political parties, left-wing
activists, criminal syndicates, and some groups
from nearby countries such as the Indian ULFA
and Burmese Rohingya.
Related issues
At the Asia-Pacific Conference on the Use
of Children as Soldiers in Kathmandu in May
2000, NGO representatives expressed concern
about the militarisation of children under
18 by political parties, student movements,
religious organisations and private criminal
gangs. An estimated 35-45,000 children are
believed to be involved with criminal gangs
engaged in arms and drug trading, toll collection,
smuggling, prostitution and trafficking in
women and children. Another major concern
is the proliferation of small arms in the
country. According to one survey in 2000,
up to 42 per cent of illegal small arms in
the country are in the hands of children under
the age of 18.[13] A recent update of this
study shows that there are roughly between
50,000 and 60,000 illegal small arms in use
in Bangladesh as of December 2000.[14]
Developments
International
Standards The Bangladeshi government signed
and ratified the CRC-OP-AC but does not support
a "straight-18" position. A declaration
made at the time of ratification states that
although under 18 year olds would be recruited
into the armed forces, a number of safeguards
were in place to check that such recruitment
was voluntary. Furthermore, as two
years compulsory training was required this
ensured that under 18 year olds would not
be assigned to combat units. The Bangladeshi
government has played an active role internationally
in promoting the CRC-OP-AC: at the July 2000
Security Council debate on children and armed
conflict, the Bangladeshi delegation supported
initiatives to declare "child-soldier
free zones" in affected areas of the
world. [15]
Demobilisation
Some members of the Shanti Bahini have been
integrated into police and paramilitary forces,
but there is no separate programme for the
rehabilitation of child soldiers in the Chittagong
Hill Tracts. In addition, nearly 1,200 armed
activists of several left-wing armed groups
have surrendered to the current government.
Some of them have been integrated into paramilitary
forces but there is no specific rehabilitation
programme for children. Some 24 members of
the Shanti Bahini and 32 members of the armed
left-wing groups who surrendered to the government
have been killed by groups opposed to peace/surrender.
References :
[1] Communication from Dr.
M. Masum, Jahangirnagar University to CSC
on 24/4/01 and based on information provided
by Major General Jamil D. Ahsan, Director
General, Bangladesh Institute of International
and Strategic Studies.
[2]
Balencie and de La Grange, op.cit.
p. 752.
[3]
According to section 7 of the Act, in times
of emergency the government may declare that
any individual or category of individuals
are on active service. Horeman and Stolwijk
op. cit.
[4]
Communication from the Permanent Mission of
Bangladesh to QUNO, 17/11/97.
[5]
Statement by Bangladesh Government representative
at Asia-Pacific concference on the use of
children as soldiers, Kathmandu, May 2000.
In a press conference after the release of
the UNICEF Progress of Nations report in July
1999, the Bangladesh Finance Secretary and
Health Secretary had claimed the minimum age
for military recruitment was 18.
[6]
See unofficial web site on the armed forces:
<http://members.xoom.com/banglatech/>.
[7]
Horeman, B. & Stolwijk, M., op. cit.
[8]
M. Masum op cit.
[9] Bangladesh National Coalition.
op. cit.
[10] M. Masum op cit.
[11] Information provided
to Asia-Pacific Conference on the Use of Children
as Soldiers, Kathmandu, May 2000.
[12]
Minority Rights Group International, War:
The Impact on Minority and Indigenous Children,
Report 97/2
[13] Research survey on small
arms and children, Bangladesh Development
Partnership Centre
[14] According to the Daily
Prothom Alo there are between 100,000 and
200,000 illegal small arms in the country,
of which 50,000 are in Dhaka - Prothom Alo
- November 14, 1998
[15]
UN press release, 26 July 2000
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