SA has duty to indict Djotodia - SANDU

Central African Republic's new leader Michel Djotodia. Photo: Reuters

Central African Republic's new leader Michel Djotodia. Photo: Reuters

Published Apr 1, 2013

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Johannesburg - The South African government has a legal duty to have Central African Republic (CAR) rebel leader Michel Djotodia indicted by the International Criminal Court (ICC), the South African National Defence Union (Sandu) said on Sunday.

This followed media reports that rebels which took control of the country last week used child soliders against the SA National Defence Force, national secretary Pikkie Greeff said in a statement.

“Using child soldiers to conduct acts of war and aggression is a violation of human rights and an international act of criminality,” he said.

“The SA government has a legal duty to enforce international human rights law. It can best do so by initiating the indictment of Djotodia through the ICC.”

He said that failing to do so would constitute a tacit but gross condonation of human rights violations and criminal conduct of a warlord abusing children as soldiers.

Earlier on Sunday, local newspaper reported South African soldiers who survived last week's rebel takeover of the CAR were traumatised after discovering that some of the rebels killed were child soldiers.

In what has turned out to be South Africa's heaviest military loss since apartheid, 13 soldiers were killed last weekend in Bangui in clashes with Seleka rebels who toppled president Francois Bozize.

Around 200 South African troops fought against about 3 000 rebels during the battle for the CAR capital that lasted several hours.

Some of survivors who have returned home recounted to local newspapers that they only discovered after the battle that they had been fighting against some teenage rebel soldiers.

“It was only after the firing had stopped that we saw we had killed kids. We did not come here for this... to kill kids. It makes you sick. They were crying calling for help... calling for (their) moms,” a paratrooper told the Sunday Times.

South African President Jacob Zuma in January had approved the deployment of 400 soldiers to the Central African Republic to help local troops. as part of a bilateral pact with the administration of now deposed Bozize. In the end about 200 soldiers were sent.

Some of the Central African rebels were “teenagers who should be in school,” the soldier told the paper.

In the City Press a soldier was quoted as saying many of the rebels were “only children”.

The two papers also quoted the soldiers saying the South African troops were running out of ammunition.

South Africa's government now faces increasing calls at home for a probe into why troops were sent to the Central African Republic.

Zuma is due to attend an extraordinary summit of the Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS) on Wednesday to be hosted by the Chadian leader Idriss Deby Itno. - Sapa

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