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"There seems to be an active and deliberate campaign to recruit children," UNICEF Somalia's Isabella Castrogiovanni told AFP in Nairobi.Mohamed Abdulkadir Mursal is a 15-year-old Somali government soldier. His brother has already been killed in combat and he said he was determined to die with a gun in his hand."I know it is not a simple job for a child, but I don't care about what others say because I have already chosen to live and die this way," said Mursal.
No one knows exactly how many child soldiers there are in Somalia but experts estimate thousands have been roped into the ranks of armed groups.UNICEF estimates there are 250,000 child soldiers across the globe.Thousands of them are in Somalia, which has not known any effective central authority since the 1991 ouster of former president Mohamed Siad Barre.
Desperately low school enrollment levels, poverty, lack of social development schemes and inadequate birth registration systems make recruitment all the easier.According to a yet to be released study by UNICEF, it takes place in schools and camps for the estimated 1.3 million people who have been internally displaced, mainly over the past three years.Many observers and rights groups suspect the same has been happening in the refugee camps set up in neighboring countries, notably in Kenya.,,more..http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/world/view/20090615-210588/In-Somalia-war-children-wage-jihad
Recruitment is either forced or "voluntary," when desire for revenge is stirred in young boys whose families have been affected by war.
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