Oct 28, 2013

In 2010, UNICEF condemned the recruitment of child soldiers by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which had been fighting the Turkish government since 1984. After 9/11, Ankara tried to use the PKK's adoption of this practice against the organization in its international solidarity campaign against terrorism. On Oct. 5, after three years of dialogue, the People’s Defense Forces/Center (HPG), the armed wing of the PKK, signed the Geneva Call’s Deed of Commitment to protect children from armed conflict. The HPG's sister organization, the People’s Protection Units (YPG) in Syria, are now also in discussion with Geneva Calls, a Switzerland-based non-governmental organization, to sign the commitment as well. The statute of the International Criminal Court criminalizes the act of using children under the age of 15 in armed conflict.

The Child Soldiers Global Report 2008 asserted that the PKK had used children in its forces “since 1994, and was believed in 1998 to have had 3,000 child soldiers, more than 10% of them girls, in its forces based in Iraq and operating in south-east Turkey.” A survey by the Turkish analyst Nihat Ali Özcan, based on data from 2001 to September 2011, estimated that 42% of PKK rebels were 18 and under.

In 2012 the PKK’s military chief, Murat Karayilan, denied his group used these youths in armed conflict. He told a northern Iraqi news agency, “What we call tender ages are youngsters who are 16 to 17 years old. But we do not put the youth at that age into war. At the beginning, we could not find a chance to send them back since they had already come. So we tried to prepare them for the future by training them.”



A 2012 study on child labor by the US Labor Department reported that children were being recruited by Kurdish militant groups that have been “fighting for equal rights in Turkey for nearly three decades, although a cease fire declared in early 2013 remained in effect as this report went to press.” The PKK declared a truce in March 2013 and a withdrawal of its forces from Turkey, but suspended its withdrawal last month and threatened to order fighters back into Turkey.

The Geneva Call was launched in March 2000 as a humanitarian organization to persuade armed non-state actors to follow international law and convince them to respect humanitarian law.



On the behalf of the HPG, Delal Amed, a female PKK commander, signed the Deed of Commitment for the Protection of Children from the Effects of Armed Conflict. “We will make all efforts to ensure that all 16-18 year olds are separated and kept away from combat zones. We are also ready to cooperate with Geneva Call and provide access to these young persons,” Amed pledged. “The next HPG conference will adopt this new status and we will take all measures to secure compliance with this commitment.”

According to Elisabeth Decrey Warner, president of Geneva Call, the PKK and her organization will now work together on implementation, which would directly benefit some 300 to 400 children. She stated, “We commend their pledge and are confident that this will serve as an example for other armed non-state actors, notably in Syria. We also hope that it will make a positive contribution to the ongoing talks between the Turkish state and Abdullah Öcalan of the PKK movement.”



Geneva Call representatives have traveled to the city of al-Malikiya (Derik in Kurdish) for their dialogue with the YPG in Syria. In an email interview, Mehmet Balci, Geneva Call's program director for the Middle East, told Al-Monitor, “We want the YPG to review and improve its respect towards the international human rights norms. We discussed with YPG what we have observed so far in their practice in relation to the rules of armed conflict.”



The August 2013 report by the UN Human Rights Council's Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic accuses anti-government and Kurdish armed groups of recruiting and using child soldiers in the Syrian conflict. The report alleges, “In Afrin (Aleppo) and Al Hasakah, the YPG recruited boys and girls from the age of 12. In late 2012, large numbers were recruited to counter an attempt by Jabhat Al-Nusra to enter Al Hasakah from Turkey.”