ACLU Welcomes Child Soldiers Accountability Act (10/3/2008)
Bipartisan legislation signed into law today
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: (202) 675-2312,
media@dcaclu.org or (212) 549-2666, media@aclu.org
WASHINGTON, DC – The American Civil Liberties
Union applauds President Bush and both chambers of Congress for enacting the
Child Soldiers Accountability Act law today. The Act criminalizes the
recruitment and use of child soldiers and gives the United
States the authority to deport or to deny entry
to individuals for such activities.
“With this new law,
America has announced that the use of
child soldiers is heinous and unforgiveable. The ACLU commends President Bush
and Congress for taking this step to protect the world’s children,” said
Caroline Fredrickson, director of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office.
“Senator Durbin deserves special recognition for introducing the bill and
spearheading the effort to marshal it through Congress. Leaders who use children
to fight their wars will not be protected by the American
government.”
“While our government has taken this
historic step to protect children from recruitment as child soldiers abroad, it
simultaneously fails to protect the youth who have already been forcibly
involved in armed conflict,” added Jamil Dakwar, director of the ACLU Human
Rights Program. “The U.S.
shamefully continues to detain alleged former child soldiers at Guantánamo and
U.S.-run facilities in Iraq
and Afghanistan without recognizing their
juvenile status or observing international juvenile justice
standards.”
In May, the ACLU submitted a report
to the U.N. Committee on the Rights of the Child criticizing U.S. detention of
children at Guantánamo and U.S.-run facilities overseas without recognizing
their juvenile status or observing international juvenile justice standards.
Highlighted in the report are the cases of Omar Khadr, a Canadian citizen in
Department of Defense custody since he was 15, detained at Guantánamo on charges
that include alleged crimes committed when he was 10 years old, and Mohammed
Jawad, an Afghan national captured when he was about 16, whose case has been
marred by ethical and legal problems resulting in the prosecutor’s
recent resignation in protest. Both Khadr and Jawad have claimed they were
subjected to torture and mistreatment in U.S.
custody.
According to the ACLU, the lack of
protections and consideration for the juvenile status of detainees violates the
obligations of the U.S. under
the Optional Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict that the
U.S. ratified in 2002, as well as
universally accepted international norms.
In its own report made public in
May, the U.S. government
revealed that it has no comprehensive policy in place for dealing with youth
detained by the U.S. military. According to the
government report, approximately 2,500 youths under the age of 18 have been
held, in some cases for months and years without being charged with a crime, in
Guantánamo
Bay and U.S.-run facilities
overseas. As of April 2008, there are approximately 500 youths being held in
US-run detention facilities in Iraq alone. The government report
claims that it is holding Iraqi children in prison in order to educate them to
"contribute positively to the future of Iraq."
These revelations raised clear
concern among the U.N. Committee members, who called on the U.S. to institute much-needed policies for
dealing with juveniles in U.S. military
custody.
The ACLU calls on the government to
adopt the CRC recommendations, including:
- Ensure that captured children are
only detained as a measure of last resort and that detained children enjoy
adequate conditions in accordance with their age and vulnerability;
-
Reduce the number of children
detained at U.S.-run facilities abroad and prevent the detention of suspected
child soldiers at Guantánamo;
-
Avoid criminal prosecutions of
suspected child soldiers before military commissions and promptly and
impartially investigate accusations against detained children, in accordance
with minimum fair trial standards; and,
-
Guarantee captured children a
periodic and impartial review of their detention and impartially investigate
reports of torture and abuse against child prisoners, and bring to justice those
responsible.
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