UPDATED ON:
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2007
4:19 MECCA TIME, 1:19 GMT
 
NEWS ASIA-PACIFIC
Myanmar accused over child soldiers
HRW says children as young as 10 are recruited to meet shortages in military ranks [GALLO/GETTY]
Children as young as 10 years old are being forced to join Myanmar's armed forces, with the government offering brokers cash and other incentives for each new recruit, a US human rights group has said.
Human Rights Watch (HRW) says growing numbers of children are being targeted because of high desertion rates and a lack of willing volunteers as Myanmar's military rulers look to expand the country's armed forces.
Myanmar has rejected the group's report saying HRW "based its report on the baseless accusations and exaggerated lies of insurgent groups on the border."
 
Allegations that both the government and ethnic rebel fighters forcibly recruit child soldiers are long-standing and have been highlighted before by the UN.
 
But the latest charges come as Myanmar faces widespread international criticism over its crackdown on anti-government protests last month in which human rights groups say hundreds are thought to have died.
 
False records
 

Your Views

"Until the generals' military hardware is crumbled, they won't listen to anyone"

Oomlwin, Yangon, Myanmar

Send us your views

In its report Human Rights Watch said recruiters routinely falsify enlistment records to list children as 18, the minimum legal age for service.
 
The group cited the case of a boy who said he was forcibly recruited at age 11, though he was only 1.3 metres tall, and weighed less than 31kg.
 
It said child recruits were "sometimes forced to participate in human rights abuses, such as burning villages and using civilians for forced labour.
 
"Those who attempt to escape or desert are beaten, forcibly re-recruited, or imprisoned".
 
Denial
 
Rejecting the allegations Ye Htut, deputy director-general of Myanmar's information ministry, said the allegations were "another example of biased reporting" by the New York-based rights group.
 
In an email response to the Associated Press, he said Myanmar's armed forces have had regulations since 1973 forbidding forced inscription and the recruitment of minors.
 
Ye Htut said: "If the authorities find out that a recruit was recruited against his will or he is under 18 years, the responsible personnel will be tried according to the military law."
Source: Agencies
Related:
Myanmar frees more detainees  
(27 Oct 2007)
Show of force on Myanmar streets  
(26 Oct 2007)
Myanmar to allow UN rights visit  
(23 Oct 2007)
Myanmar generals lift Yangon curfew  
(20 Oct 2007)
Amnesty exposes Myanmar violence  
(18 Oct 2007)
Tools:
Send  Email article
Print  Print article
 Send your feedback
Top news
Myanmar cyclone toll nears 78,000
Aftershock rattles China quake zone
Lebanon talks open in Doha
Zimbabwe run-off set for June 27
McCain in Hamas 'hypocrisy' claim
ASIA-PACIFIC news
Aftershock rattles China quake zone
Myanmar cyclone toll nears 78,000
US to resume North Korea food aid
US marine jailed for Japan assault
'Huge turnout' for Myanmar vote