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1 [1] (October 31, 2022)

handle is hein.crs/govejgh0001 and id is 1 raw text is: Con gressionol Research Service
Informing the legislitive debate since 1914

Child Soldiers Prevention Act:
The recruitment and use of children in armed conflict is
broadly viewed as a human rights problem, a form of
trafficking in persons, among the worst forms of child
labor, and a war crime. The United Nations (U.N.) has
identified the recruitment and use of child soldiers as
among six grave violations affecting children in war and
has established monitoring and reporting mechanisms and
initiatives to combat this practice. The U.N. verified that
more than 6,000 children were recruited and used as
soldiers in 2021, including in Syria (1,296), Somalia
(1,161), Democratic Republic of the Congo (565), Mali
(352), Central African Republic (329), and
Burma/Myanmar (280), among other countries. Most of the
children were boys, and the majority were recruited and
used by non-state actors.
U.S. efforts to eradicate this phenomenon internationally
are guided largely by the Child Soldiers Prevention Act of
2008 (CSPA, Title IV of P.L. 110-457), which defines the
term child soldier and restricts certain security assistance
to countries that recruit or use child soldiers, among other
provisions. The Child Soldier Prevention Act of 2018 (Title
II, Subtitle B of P.L. 115-425), which became law in
January 2019, strengthened some of the CSPA's provisions.
Defining Chd Soldr
The recruitment or use of persons under age 15 as soldiers
is prohibited by both the U.N. Convention on the Rights of
the Child (CRC) and the Additional Protocols to the
Geneva Conventions, and is considered a war crime under
the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. In
addition, the Optional Protocol to the CRC on the
involvement of children in armed conflict further prohibits
persons under age 18 from being compulsorily recruited
into state armed forces, from directly engaging in
hostilities, and from being recruited or used in hostilities
under any circumstances by non-state armed groups. The
United States is a party to the Optional Protocol.
Congress, through the CSPA, has defined child soldiers in a
manner generally consistent with the Optional Protocol.
Under the CSPA, child soldier refers to persons under age
18 who
* take direct part in hostilities as a member of
governmental armed forces, police, or other security
forces; or
* are compulsorily recruited into governmental armed
forces, police, or other security forces (or are under 15
years old and are voluntarily recruited), including in
noncombat roles; or
* are recruited or used in hostilities by non-state armed
forces, including in noncombat roles.

Updated October 31, 2022
Security Assistance Restrictions
CSPA Reporting and Restrictions
The CSPA aims to combat the recruitment or use of
children as soldiers by publicly identifying countries that
engage in this practice and restricting certain types of U.S.
security assistance to these countries. The law requires that
the Secretary of State publish annually a list of countries
within which governmental armed forces, police, or other
security forces or government-supported armed groups,
including paramilitaries, militias, or civil defense forces,
recruited or used child soldiers during the previous year.
Pursuant to the CSPA, the State Department, since 2010,
has published a list of countries within the annual State
Department Trafficking in Persons Report (TIP Report).
Types of Security Assistance Prohibited
The following types of security assistance are prohibited for
the governments of countries designated pursuant to the
CSPA (subject to exceptions and waivers, discussed
below):
* licenses for direct commercial sales (DCS) of military
equipment;
* foreign military financing (FMF);
* international military education and training (IMET);
* excess defense articles (EDA); and
* peacekeeping operations (PKO).
Assistance or support under some Department of Defense
(DOD) authorities, such as the train and equip authority
for building the capacity of foreign defense forces (codified
at 10 U.S.C. §333), may also be affected. Other forms of
U.S. security assistance to CSPA-listed countries may
continue to be provided under the law, although constraints
may be applied as a matter of policy.
Exceptions
The President may provide military education and training
through certain institutions and/or nonlethal supplies for up
to five years to a CSPA-designated country upon certifying
that the recipient government is taking steps to demobilize,
reintegrate, and rehabilitate child soldiers and that such
assistance will support military professionalization. The
prohibition on PKO does not apply to programs that support
military professionalism, security sector reform, respect for
human rights, peacekeeping preparation, or the
demobilization and reintegration of child soldiers.
Presidential Waivers
The President has authority under the CSPA to waive all, or
certain types, of security assistance restrictions to a given
country if the President determines that doing so is in the
national interest and certifies to Congress that the relevant
government is taking effective and continuing steps to
address the problem of child soldiers. The President may
also reinstate any assistance that would otherwise be
prohibited by certifying that the government in question has

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