UAE- Yemen's child soldiers need rehabilitation: paper
ABU DHABI 12th October 2015 (WAM) -- No parent should have to bury their own child especially under the circumstances faced by Ghazal the mother of 14-year-old Ahmed Al Sorori. When Ahmed disappeared from the family home in Sanaa she thought he had travelled to the family's village. Instead he had been lured by a group of so-called friends into the ranks of the Houthi rebels who are fighting a bloody but ultimately losing battle to overthrow the legitimate government of Yemen. Two weeks after Ahmed disappeared his body was returned to his mother.
In an editorial today The National says that since 2013 there has been a huge increase in the recruitment and use of children by Yemen's armed groups and that according to a Unicef report in August 377 children between the ages of 9 and 17 have been drafted into the war so far in 2015.
"Cynically" the paper says "Recruiting children to take up arms for a cause they do not and cannot understand is the height of moral and ethical bankruptcy. It is an obscenity. Yet with estimates that up to a third of their fighting force are teenagers it is clear that the Houthis are attempting to exploit and pollute an entire generation of Yemenis. They have stolen their childhood deprived them of an education and proper religious instruction and denied them a future."
The editorial continues "Under Yemeni law and accepted practice worldwide the minimum age for a front line soldier is 18. Under international law recruiting a child younger than 15 is a war crime. Make no mistake the Houthis are criminals. They are not freedom fighters they are a foreign-backed force that has no plan for Yemen except to perpetuate sectarian chaos. Once they usurped the reins of government in Sanaa it was clear that they must be stopped.
"The UAE has rightly joined the Saudi-led coalition to restore President Abdrabu Mansur Hadi and his government to power. This has been a costly battle for the UAE in terms of the lives of our soldiers but it is a necessary one. The coalition is slowly but surely moving towards victory against the Houthis but our engagement won't be over when the capital is prised from the grip of the extremists. The UAE has already committed to rebuilding infrastructure in Yemen and is providing practical help on the ground via the Emirates Red Crescent.
The paper concludes by saying "We should also take an active role in demobbing and rehabilitating the young soldiers who have been so cynically drafted into the conflict. Lest the cycle of violence perpetuate itself they will need help to reclaim their childhood with all the simple pleasures recreation education and moral instruction that that entails. It is too late for Ahmed but his generation can still be saved."
WAM/Moran
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