In Colombia, Petro fends off criticism over killing of child rebel recruits

Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro reported that eight underage rebel recruits were killed last week as a result of the Colombian government’s recent military offensive against a well-known armed group.

The news comes as Colombia’s armed groups have recently increased their recruitment of children, sparking a debate over whether forced recruits can be protected on the front lines.

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President Petro confirmed that seven adolescents were killed on November 10 during a government bombing campaign in the southern Guaviare department in a Monday post on the social media platform X.

In a government offensive in the eastern region of Arauca, a second minor was killed three days later, on November 13.

At least 12 teenage fatalities were reported in under two months as a result of those deaths.

Petro, a former rebel, wrote in his post that “everyone of them was the victims of forced recruitment by criminals who have dragged them into hostilities and deprived them of protection.”

However, Colombia’s growing armed actors have increasingly sought to exploit minors, and the issue of how to protect young recruits is contentious.

a rise in child recruitment

Colombia has been at odds with right-wing paramilitaries, left-wing rebels, and criminal organizations for more than 60 years due to an armed conflict.

According to official government statistics, those organizations have attempted to rise in ranks by appealing to children under the age of 18 and, in some cases, coercing them into employment.

Between 2021 and 2024, the government estimates a 1, 000 percent increase in the number of new recruits.

In a UN report from June, the same uptick was found. According to its findings, 474 cases of armed groups recruiting or using minors were recorded between 2022 and 2024.

The office received reports of 118 more child recruits in the first quarter of 2025.

According to the report, some of the victims had as young as nine years old. Many of the indigenous communities in Colombia.

The most recent casualties come as Petro’s government intensifies its crackdown on the dissident group EMC, which split from the now-demobilized Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

The EMC is renowned for drawing on children to bolster its ranks, according to Elizabeth Dickinson, the think tank’s deputy director for Latin America.

She told Al Jazeera, “The EMC, particularly, is probably the organization that has historically been most resolute or guilty of recruiting minors.”

She explained that the organization deploys children around the perimeter of its commanders’ positions as “human shields.”

[File: Luis Jaime Acosta/Reuters] A statue of rebel commander Miguel Botache Santillana stands at the entrance of a Colombian armed group’s Estado Mayor Central (EMC) school.

Petro is facing criticism.

Colombia has received criticism for how the government deals with military operations that could harm young recruits.

In 2026, Petro’s left-wing government is up for reelection, and the country is set for a crucial presidential election.

The opposition has already seized on the potential violation of international humanitarian law by killing young recruits.

Pedro Sanchez, the defense minister, has been given a motion of condemnation from the congress.

Some organizations have urged Sanchez to step down immediately, including Representative Katherine Miranda.

Miranda also issued an appeal to Petro on social media this week, “Face the country and stand up for the state crime you are committing against children who have been forced into recruitment”

According to Dickinson of the International Crisis Group, Petro’s most recent post might suggest that young recruits are not subject to international law protection.

Dickinson responded, “That is not correct.” These are conflict victims, they say. They are young people. They were compelled to work with them.

For instance, the Geneva Convention mandates that states parties “take all reasonable steps” to prevent child recruits under the age of 15 from joining.

Children are merely a reality in today’s conflict, Dickinson said. The government must take that into account if they carry out bombardments, he says.

Guerrillas from the EMC walk down a dirt road in Colombia
On April 12, 2024, EMC rebel fighters pass by a road in Llanos del Yari, Colombia [Luis Jaime Acosta/Reuters]

‘Brutally naive ‘ is what.

It’s difficult to blame child recruits for the deaths of their children, according to Hilda Molano, a COALICO coordinator.

Despite the complex circumstances, she urged all parties to consider children’s rights.

In situations like these, Molano stated to Al Jazeera, “It is obvious that no one person is to blame; in the end, it is a shared responsibility.”

Molano demanded that Colombia’s government improve its presence in conflict areas and do more to deter child recruitment.

She claimed that children in conflict zones “are at risk of being recruited by armed groups and killed by state security forces.”

Meanwhile, the Petro government has maintained that its actions are compliant with international laws governing child protection.

Al Jazeera reached out to the Ministry of Defense for comment, but it was unable to provide a response at the time of publication.

The president claimed that his efforts had already resulted in the release of 2,411 minors, according to the president’s claim on social media.

He remarked that “peace is the best way to stop children from fighting in war.”

He also confirmed that his country’s plans to continue its fight against the EMC, which has been the site of a number of car bombings and drone attacks this year targeting military and police installations.

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What is Europe’s role in Sudan’s refugee crisis?

Last week, 42 migrants were presumed to have drowned in the Mediterranean Sea after their dinghy set sail off the Libyan coast.

At least 29 of them were Sudanese refugees who fled the catastrophic civil war in their country between the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and the regular army known as the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF).

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Since erupting in April 2023, the Sudan war has caused the largest displacement crisis in the world.

Nearly 13 million people have been uprooted from their homes and more than four million have fled to neighbouring countries, such as Chad, Egypt and Libya.

According to the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR), more than 86, 000 Sudanese nationals are registered as asylum seekers or refugees in Libya – a 60, 000 uptick compared with before the war.

As more Sudanese attempt to reach Europe from Libya, this is everything you need to know about their plight.

How many Sudanese asylum seekers have reached Europe since the war started?

From April 2023 to January 2024, the European Union Agency for Asylum (EUAA) registered nearly 10, 000 asylum applications from Sudanese nationals across the European Union – nearly twice as high as the previous year.

While figures for 2025 have not yet been published, the growing number of Sudanese nationals arriving in Libya suggests that more people are aiming to reach Europe as their final destination.

“I hope to soon take the journey across the sea to Europe”, Hamid, a Sudanese refugee from Khartoum, told Al Jazeera from Libya, where he arrived earlier this year.

“Hopefully, God will make the journey safe”, he added with resignation.

How are Sudanese asylum seekers treated in Europe?

Only a minority of the 10, 000 Sudanese asylum seekers have been granted protection so far, with the rest either rejected or waiting for a ruling.

In general, life has not been easy for many young Sudanese men after reaching Europe.

Some EU states are using anti-smuggling laws to criminalise young men for steering the small and overcrowded boats that smugglers put them in.

In Greece, more than 200 Sudanese minors and young men between the ages of 15 and 21 are facing smuggling charges.

Some have already been convicted and sentenced to decades or life in prison, pushing their lawyers to appeal.

Migration experts have long explained that vulnerable youth often agree to “steer” boats in exchange for a discounted price from smugglers, who often charge thousands of dollars from destitute asylum seekers looking for safety.

Does Europe bear responsibility for Sudan’s crisis?

The Nomadic “Arab” government-linked Popular Defence Forces, known as the Janjaweed militias, that spearheaded a brutal campaign in the far western region of Darfur at the turn of the millennium, have created the RSF, which has committed countless atrocities throughout the war.

Later, those militias were accused of committing numerous war crimes and crimes against humanity against primarily sedentary “non-Arab” communities.

According to a number of legal scholars and human rights organizations, the atrocities may have been equivalent to genocide.

However, Sudan’s then-President Omar al-Bashir converted many of the Popular Defense Forces militias into the RSF in 2013.

The RSF quickly touted itself as a potential partner in the Sahel and Horn of Africa’s “manage migration” mission in a bid to gain international legitimacy.

The “Khartoum Process,” an initiative that increased cooperation between the EU and East African countries to combat irregular migration, was announced by the EU in 2014.

Over the course of five years, Sudan received about $200 million in this endeavor.

Suliman Baldo, a researcher in Sudan, discovered that some of this money had been used to improve the judiciary and law enforcement, and that it may have been used to fund the RSF.

The EU has long denied that any entity provided funding for the RSF.

The EU suspended all migration cooperation after the Sudanese security forces, including the RSF, killed more than 120 pro-democracy protesters in Khartoum on June 3.

Sudan’s el-Fasher ‘a crime scene’ after RSF takeover: UN aid chief

The UN’s aid chief claims that Sudan’s el-Fasher has been transformed into a “crime scene” as it is pressed by the UN to gain access to the city after it fell to the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) last month.

The western Darfur region was described as “an absolute horror show,” according to Tom Fletcher, who recently wrapped up a trip there.

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In a campaign that rights organizations and witnesses claim included widespread sexual violence and kidnappings, the RSF seized control of the state’s capital, El-Fasher, in late October.

In a video, Fletcher stated, “I spent a week in Darfur, which is now the epicenter of human suffering in the world.”

According to the evaluations of numerous survivors, El-Fasher is essentially a crime location. We need to stop deliberate attacks on civilians and bring these crimes to justice, as I’ve heard so many stories of them.

“Naked cruelty”

Fletcher’s remarks come shortly after the UN Human Rights Council ordered an investigation into “atrocities” committed in El-Fasher, which had fallen on October 26 from an 18-month siege.

As the council passed a resolution ordering the investigation, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk stated on Friday that “the international community has a clear duty to act.”

“There was too much pretense, performance, and little action,” the statement read. It must stand up to these atrocities, which are intended to systematically oppress and rule over a whole population.

Any such incidents, according to the RSF, are carried out by rogue actors, the organization claims. However, evidence suggests that the armed group committed numerous mass killings, according to the UN, human rights organizations, and other observers.

Hundreds of thousands of residents of El-Fasher are reportedly trapped and without access to aid, healthcare, and other essential supplies, according to UN officials.

More than 100 000 people have reportedly fled the city to nearby towns and displacement camps since the RSF seized control of El-Fasher from the Sudanese Armed Forces, according to the most recent UN figures.

While American researchers claim satellite images suggest RSF forces are burying bodies in mass graves, survivors have described seeing bodies lining the streets.

The paramilitary group has been expanding its presence eastward into the nearby Kordofan region, where the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has reported “intensified air strikes, drone attacks, and heavy troop mobilization since early November.”

According to an update from UNHCR, residents of the towns of Babanousa, Dilling, and Kadugli have been besieged because their access to food, water, and health care is “roast deteriorating.”

Gunmen attack Nigeria church, killing and kidnapping worshippers

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The first moments of a gun attack, which involved the murder of at least two people and the kidnapping of the pastor and worshippers, were captured on video from a Nigerian church service. The government of Nigeria has refuted recent US allegations of a “genocide” committed there against Christians.