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IRAQ WARS
Iraqi Kurdish militias using child soldiers
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Dec 22, 2016


Children suffering in battle for Iraq's Mosul: Amnesty
Baghdad (AFP) Dec 22, 2016 - Children are being killed and wounded as well as witnessing horrific violence as Iraqi forces battle the Islamic State group in heavily populated Mosul, Amnesty International said on Thursday.

Iraqi forces launched a massive operation to retake the country's last IS-held city more than two months ago, and have pushed the jihadists out of several neighbourhoods on Mosul's eastern side.

But the battle to retake the city -- where a million or more people may still live -- is far from over, and the heaviest fighting may still be ahead.

"Children caught in the crossfire of the brutal battle for Mosul have seen things that no one, of any age, should ever see," Amnesty's Donatella Rovera said in a statement.

"I met children who have not only sustained horrific wounds but have also seen their relatives and neighbours decapitated in mortar strikes, torn to shreds by car bombs or mine explosions, or crushed under the rubble of their homes," Rovera said.

One woman named Mouna recounted how her daughters, aged eight and 14 months, were killed by mortar fire last month.

"I was telling the girls to go inside. There was shelling and shooting 24 hours a day in our area," the rights group quoted Mouna as saying.

"Just then a mortar landed by the house. I collapsed on the spot, my daughter Teiba fell with her head against the gate, and the little one crawled and crawled till she reached me and collapsed on my lap."

IS overran large areas north and west of Baghdad beginning in June 2014, but Iraqi forces backed by the US-led coalition and Iran have since regained much of the territory they had lost.

But the war against the jihadists has taken a significant toll in money, lives and heavily damaged towns and cities.

Two Iraqi militias linked to the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) are recruiting child soldiers, Human Rights Watch said on Thursday.

The rights group said it had documented 29 cases of Kurdish and Yezidi children recruited by the People's Defence Forces (HPG) -- an armed wing of the PKK -- and the Shingal Resistance Units (YBS).

The HPG has forces in Turkey, Syria and Iraq, and is fighting against Turkish forces and also against militias including the Islamic State group.

"In two cases the armed groups abducted or seriously abused children who tried to leave their forces," HRW said in a statement.

"The groups should urgently demobilise children, investigate abuses, pledge to end child recruitment, and appropriately penalise commanders who fail to do so."

The PKK is a Kurdish separatist group which Turkey considers to be a "terrorist" organisation.

The YBS is formed largely of fighters from the Yezidi religious minority, which has faced a campaign of extermination by IS.

The jihadist group sees Yezidis as infidels and massacred Yezidi civilians in Sinjar in August 2014, executing men and abducting women as sex slaves.

HRW said some of the children it interviewed had taken part in fighting, while others had manned checkpoints or cleaned and prepared arms.

One, a young Yezidi at a refugee camp in Iraqi Kurdistan, said he had joined the HPG in 2014 when he was 14 and fought in Syria until July 2016.

"Even if the armed groups do not send children into direct combat, they place them at risk by training them in areas that Turkey has attacked with air strikes in its conflict with the PKK, such as Iraq's Qandil mountain area," HRW said.

Under international law, the recruitment or use of children under 15 as fighters is a war crime.


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