Since 1996, the issue of children affected by armed conflict has been placed firmly on the international agenda, beginning with the groundbreaking report of Graça Machel and the establishment of the mandate of the Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict.
Since then, a solid body of international legal standards has been elaborated. For example: the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court classifies the recruitment of children into fighting forces as a war crime and a crime against humanity. The International Labour Organization's Convention No. 182 defines child soldiering as one of the worst forms of child labour. The African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child outlaws child soldiering, and the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child established 18 as the minimum age for children's participation in hostilities.
Here are links to some of the most important documents defining how the world should act to protect its children:
Recent posts
- Informe anual: los niños sufren una violencia atroz en los conflictos y aumenta el número de violaciones graves en 2017
- Más de 100.000 niños soldado han abandonado las armas en los últimos 20 años
- Colombia: un nuevo informe pide que prosigan los esfuerzos para proteger a todos los niños afectados por el conflicto
- Colombia: La Representante Especial de la ONU para los niños y los conflictos armados se felicita por el anuncio sobre el plan para la separación de los niños vinculados a las FARC-EP
- Colombia: La Representante Especial de la ONU para los niños y los conflictos armados se felicita por el anuncio sobre el plan para la separación de los niños vinculados a las FARC-EP