18.5 C
Abuja
Thursday, December 19, 2024
HomeNews145 Child Soldiers Released In South Sudan - UN

145 Child Soldiers Released In South Sudan – UN

Date:

Related stories

Nigeria: Zaar Community Criticizes Muslim Group Over Sayawa Chiefdom Proposal

The Zaar Development Association (ZDA) Worldwide has expressed strong...

Nigeria: Foundation Advocates Treatment, Skills Acquisition For VVF Survivors

By Justina Auta The Intermediation Foundation, an NGO has called...

Nigeria: KDSG To Revolutionize Child HealthCare As SPHCB Partners Two Organisations

In a groundbreaking initiative to enhance healthcare delivery in...

Strong 7.3 Magnitude Earthquake Hits Vanuatu

A strong 7.3 magnitude earthquake has struck near Vanuatu's...

UNICEF

The UN children’s Agency UNICEF said on Wednesday it had negotiated the release of 145 child soldiers from two rebel groups in South Sudan.

UNICEF head in South Sudan Mahimbo Mdoe, in a statement expressed optimism that this release will be followed by many others.

According to UNICEF estimation, around 16 000 children are currently fighting or working as porters with armed groups in South Sudan and including the national army. It says that more than 800 have been recruited this year alone.

The 145 released this week came from a group called the Cobra Faction and from the main SPLA/IO rebel faction, both in the eastern Pibor region of the country. In 2015, armed groups in the same area released a total of 1 775 children.

Freed children are disarmed, given civilian clothes and drafted into a reintegration programme. They receive counseling and efforts are made to trace their families.

“Children in South Sudan need safety, protection and opportunities,” Mdoe said.

“With the ongoing fighting across the country, UNICEF continues to receive reports about the recruitment of children. We urge all parties to abide by international law, to end recruitment and to release children who are currently serving in their ranks.”

South Sudan fell back into civil war in December 2013, with fighting continuing despite international efforts to force a peace deal on the warring parties.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here