The Kids Aren’t All Right
By Nick Turse
Source: TomDispatch.com
May 18, 2015
MALAKAL, South Sudan I didnt really think he was going to shoot me. There was no anger in his eyes. His finger may not have been anywhere near the trigger. He didnt draw a bead on me. Still, he was a boy and he was holding an AK-47 and it was pointed in my direction.
When I was their age, I wasnt trusted to drive, vote, drink, get married, gamble in a casino, serve on a jury, rent a car, or buy a ticket to an R-rated movie. It was mandatory for me to be in school. The law decreed just how many hours I could work and prohibited my employment in jobs deemed too dangerous for kids like operating mixing machines in bakeries or repairing elevators. No one, I can say with some certainty, would have thought it a good idea to put an automatic weapon in my hands. But someone thought it was acceptable for them. A lot of someones actually. Their government the government of South Sudan apparently thought so. And so did mine, the government of the United States.
There was a reason that boy pointed his weapon my way. A lot of them, in fact. In the most immediate sense, I brought it upon myself. I was doing something I knew could get me in trouble, but I just couldnt help myself.
I tried to take a picture. Okay, I took a picture. More than one.
By May 2014, UNICEF
estimated that 9,000 children had been recruited into the armed forces of both sides in the civil war, despite the fact that under both international and South Sudanese law, the forcible or voluntary recruitment of persons under the age of 18, whether as a member of a regular army or of an informal militia, is prohibited. Today, that number is estimated to have grown to 13,000.
Full article:
https://zcomm.org/znetarticle/the-kids-arent-all-right/
Yay, war .... and whatever it takes.