CRIN Children and Armed Conflict 170

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24 May 2013, issue 170 view online | subscribe | submit information

CRINMAIL 170: 

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Highlight on Thailand

This CRINMAIL features regular background information on a conflict situation in a specific country followed by an analysis of its impact on children. In light of the ongoing negotiations between the government and some of the insurgent factions, this month will focus on Thailand.


The Southern Insurgency

 Thailand has faced a secessionist movement by the majority Muslim southern provinces of Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat since they were annexed in 1902. Those provinces used to be part of the independent Sultanate of Patani.

Since the annexation, the Thai authorities imposed policies of forced assimilation; but local traditions were practiced in secret.

 

The start of the uprising

A series of opposition uprisings were staged between the 1940s and 1980s. In the 1980s, the Thai government stopped its assimilation policy and supported cultural rights and economic development in the historically marginalised southern provinces, which calmed the separatist movement for a period of time.

 A new series of separatist attacks against the government in the southern provinces began when Thaksin Shinawatra became Prime Minister in 2001. The aggressive response from the Government exacerbated tensions between the government and the separatists.

 

The violent insurgency since 2004

The conflict reignited in 2004 and has been intensely violence, claiming the lives of more than 5000 people to date. Since then, attacks on government sector services and local villagers - both Buddhist and Muslim - accused of working with the government have become endemic. The violence is also attributed to local criminal gangs and drug runners and state security forces carrying out retributive attacks.

The insurgents have increasingly targeted persons taking no active part in hostilities, particularly in the aftermath of the period of military rule in Thailand which followed the coup d'état by the Royal Thai Army in September 2006 against the government of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.

Even after a civilian government came into power in 2008, the southern provinces continued to be under martial law and governed by the emergency decree, granting more power to security forces. The government justified this under the need to address the security issues in the south.

 

Political Tensions

Thailand has been beset by political instability since the military coup of 2006. The coup came after widespread accusations of corruption and nationwide protests against Thaksin Shinawatra.

 

The military rule

After taking power, the military cancelled the upcoming elections, abrogated the Constitution, dissolved the Parliament and the Constitutional Court, banned protests and all political activities, suppressed and censored the media, declared martial law nationwide, and arrested Cabinet members.

Elections were held in December 2007, after a military-appointed tribunal outlawed the Thai Rak Thai party of Thaksin Shinawatra and banned TRT candidates from contesting elections for 5 years.

 

The violent crackdown on protesters in 2010

Protestors from the United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD) also known as the "Red Shirts" occupied downtown Bangkok in April and May 2010 demanding new elections.

The Government responded with a brutal crackdown on protesters, leaving nearly 100 people dead and thousands injured in the worst political violence in Bangkok in nearly 20 years, for which no one was ultimately held responsible.

Elections were finally announced in May 2011. The Pheu Thai Party[1] won a majority of 265 seats. Its leader Yingluck Shinawatra became the first female prime minister in the history of Thailand.

 

The Internal Security Act

Thailand’s Internal Security Act (“ISA”) is increasingly being invoked to address a variety of potential issues. For example, the Act allows the Cabinet to grant the Internal Security Operations Command (ISOC) exceptional powers to replace civilian authorities and to suppress any activity considered to pose a threat to internal security.

The increased use of the ISA raises important issues of human rights and democratic governance, especially given the current realities of political polarisation in the country.

The International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) has expressed concerns about how Thailand intends to strike a balance between security and rights protection through the ISA. According to ICJ: ”experience from around the world, including Southeast Asia, shows that these laws are often used to empower executive authority and security forces, suppress political opposition and undermine the rights of citizens.” Read ICJ’s comprehensive assessment of Thailand’s Internal Security Act.

 

Read more on Thailand’s key actors and parties.

 

 Children and armed conflict

Insurgents have committed widespread human rights abuses, including targeted killings and numerous bombings against civilians. In response, the Government has imposed special security legislation and significantly increased the number of regular and paramilitary troops to around 30,000 in the southern provinces.

As a result of the violence and insecurity in the south, many people have decided to leave the region. Buddhists account for a large share of this movement.

Human rights abuses have reportedly been committed by both insurgents and by Thai security forces. Prosecutions of alleged perpetrators of human rights violations have been limited entirely to insurgents, while those committed by Thai security forces have been poorly investigated.

According to the Report of the Secretary-General to the Security Council (April 2012) and Child Soldiers International (CSI), children have been targeted for recruitment by armed opposition groups and have been used in various roles, including intelligence gathering, diversion tactics and arson attacks.

CSI reports that “children suspected of links with armed groups have been detained under security laws including for the purposes of intelligence gathering and possibly as a method of demobilizing children from association with armed opposition groups."

In 2010, Human Rights Watch (HRW) documented attacks on teachers and schools by insurgents and the use of schools as military bases by the Thai government. Insurgents have also used Islamic schools to indoctrinate and recruit students into their own movement. The vast majority of teachers and other education personnel killed by insurgents have been ethnic Thai Buddhists, although ethnic Malay Muslims who have resisted efforts by these groups to use classrooms for indoctrination and recruitment have also been attacked.

The Government has frequently established camps inside school buildings and school compounds; sometimes for several years. According to the Report of the Secretary-General to the Security Council (April 2012) “armed groups reportedly continued to carry out targeted attacks against schools, teachers and students [in 2011], purportedly because they were perceived as a symbol of Government authority”. The report states that armed groups were also allegedly responsible for the killing of at least 31 government teachers and educational personnel in the southern border provinces during 2011.

 

Read a full list of violations of children's rights in Thailand.

 

 Sources:

- The Office of the Special Representative on Children and Armed Conflict.

- International Crisis Group, Thailand: The Evolving Conflict in the South, December 2012.

- Inside on Conflict, Thailand country profile.

- Council on Foreign Relations, the Muslim Insurgency in Southern Thailand.

- Human Rights Watch, “Targets of Both Sides”, Violence against Students, Teachers, and Schools in Thailand’s Southern Border Provinces.

- Amnesty International, "They took nothing but his life": Unlawful killings in Thailand's southern insurgency

- Child Soldiers International:

Thailand, country profile;

Thailand: OPAC Shadow report to the Committee on the Rights of the Child, September 2011;

Priority to Protect: Preventing children’s association with village defence militias in southern Thailand, February 2011.

- CRIN, Children’s Rights Wiki.




[1] The Pheu Thai Party was founded on 20 September 2008, as an anticipated replacement for the People's Power Party (PPP), which the Constitutional Court of Thailand dissolved less than three months later after finding party members guilty of electoral fraud. The People's Power Party was itself a replacement for Thaksin's original Thai Rak Thai (TRT) party that the Constitutional Court dissolved in May 2007 for violation of electoral laws. See: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/2007/05/30/headlines/headlines_30035565.php

 

News and Updates

 

Raising the minimum age of army recruitment in Britain

Child Soldiers International have published a new report on recruitment to the British armed forces of people under the age of 18. Setting the minimum age of enlistment of 16 years, they argue, creates additional unnecessary costs for the services and causes major operational pressures because of the legal requirements governing their recruitment and deployment. In the report, they make  they make the case for raising the minimum age to 18,  presenting compelling financial, operational and duty of care concerns to that effect.  Download the report.


UN calls for sanctions on CAR rights abusers

The U.N. envoy has urged the Security Council to consider imposing sanctions on rebels in the Central African Republic who are accused of severe rights violations including rape, maiming, recruitment of child soldiers and forced marriages. The already unstable situation in the CAR continued after the failure of the power sharing agreement between former-President Bozize and rebel groups in early 2013. The current interim President, Michel Djotodia, has promised elections by 2016, but the country remains divided. The extent of animosity between communities was clearly shown in the recent killing by a stone throwing mob of a 19 year old linked to one rebel faction - an action the UN has condemned

 

Allegations of torture in Syrian state prisons

In Syria, at least 2,300 people, including 80 children, have been killed under torture in state prisons since the outbreak of the war, the Syrian Network for Human Rights reported in mid-April. A staggering 95 per cent of victims were civilians, according to the organisation, which details horrific methods of torture used in regime prisons, including rape, execution, hanging and crucifixion. The Syrian Human Rights Network is calling on the UN to investigate the findings, and to refer perpetrators to the International Criminal Court, as well as urging the Arab League to pressure Assad’s allies – China, Iran and Russian – to reconsider their support for his regime. Full story.

Evidence indicating the widespread use of torture by the Syrian government has also been documented by Human Rights Watch, after visiting recently captured former state facillities now in the hands of factions opposed to Assad's regime. In order to preserve evidence of these violations, HRW have called upon rebel and opposition commanders to take particular care in securing these facilities in the future.

Meanwhile, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict, Leila Zerrougui, has labelled the ongoing conflict in Syria as a “children’s crisis”, citing the three million children caught up in the violence as having particularly suffered the consequences of this armed conflict. The UN expert has urged the Security Council to ensure an end to the violence against children. Read more here.


UN report exposes serious violations by DR Congo army

Soldiers of the Democratic Republic of Congo’s national army committed mass rape, killings and arbitrary executions in November 2012, a new UN report has found. The events occurred as soldiers fled a rebel offensive by the M23 group. The report documents a multitude of cases of sexual violence, with witness accounts describing how soldiers entered homes, looted them, and raped the women and girls they found inside. Rebel combatants were also found to have committed human rights abuses, including arbitrary executions and recruitment of children to fight in their ranks. Full story.

 

Guatemalan Genocide Trial Continues 

The genocide trial of Rios Montt, former dictator of Guatemala, is set to continue after the Guatemalan Constitutional Court overturned his conviction for genocide, torture and rape. Montt had previously been convicted and sentenced to 80 years imprisonment for his part in crimes committed against 1,771 indigenous Ixil Mayans during his rule of 1982-1983. The court annulled the conviction on the basis that Montt had been left without legal representation after the defence team left proceedings in protest. The trial will now have to be reheard and victims' families will be required to give testimony again

 
The trial marks the first time a head of state has been prosecuted for genocide in a national court.

 

THE LAST WORD

A 7 year old may have found a solution to gun violence: using chocolate bullets. The boy’s letter to the US Vice-President with this suggestion resulted in a handwritten response from Joe Biden who commented, "I really like your idea... Not only would our country be safer, it would be happier." Full story

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