Army urged to raise recruitment age to 18

THE Ministry of Defence has come under pressure to raise the minimum army enlistment age to 18.
Child Soldiers International, along with various religious groups, are urging the army to raise its recruiting age to 18. Picture: GettyChild Soldiers International, along with various religious groups, are urging the army to raise its recruiting age to 18. Picture: Getty
Child Soldiers International, along with various religious groups, are urging the army to raise its recruiting age to 18. Picture: Getty

All the bishops from the Church in Wales – including the Archbishop of Wales Dr Barry Morgan – are among a number of signatories of an open letter from the campaign group Child Soldiers International calling for an end to recruitment of under-18s to the Army.

Other signatories include the Rev Sally Foster-Fulton, convenor of the Church and Society Council of the Church of Scotland, and peace groups run by Christians including Baptists, Methodists, Roman Catholics and Quakers.

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The MoD enlists soldiers at 16 and deploys from the age of 18, but still refuses to implement a total ban on deployment of under-18s, the letter, addressed to Defence Minister Mark Francois said.

“We commend the MoD for having ceased routinely deploying children into conflict, but challenge its failure to stop recruiting them,” the letter said.

“Current recruitment policy channels the youngest, most disadvantaged recruits into the most dangerous frontline combat roles.

“Those recruited at 16 have faced double the risk of fatality of adult recruits throughout the conflict in Afghanistan.”

Even during the First World War the minimum recruitment age was 18, and only those aged 19 or over were sent overseas to fight, the letter said, although it was known that many younger boys slipped through, the letter added.

Child Soldiers International said its own analysis of MoD figures showed that last year 880 16-year-olds enlisted in the Army, 40 per cent fewer than the year before – 1,470 – and just a quarter of the 3,600 enlisted a decade earlier.

The fall has been matched by rising drop-out rates, the group claimed.

Of all the 16-year-olds recruited by the Army last year, figures recently released showed that nearly half, or 410, left during training, it said.

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Richard Clarke, director of Child Soldiers International, said: “It’s time for the MoD to recognise what more and more young people and their parents are realising – that enlisting at 16 is not in their best interests.

“Army training does not give young people what they need to succeed in today’s economy, especially in terms of qualifications. “During the First World War the minimum age for recruitment and conscription was 18, with deployment at 19.

“To be recruiting 16-year-olds a century later makes no sense at all.”

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