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Obama maintains child soldier sanctions against Myanmar
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Sept 30, 2014


Nigeria court martials soldiers for balking at taking on Boko Haram
Abuja (AFP) Sept 30, 2014 - Nigeria's army says it will on Thursday begin court martials of soldiers balking at taking part in a stepped-up campaign against a five-year Islamist insurgency in the north by the Boko Haram group.

A number of servicemen charged with refusing orders "in the course of ongoing military operations in the northeast" will go on trial before a military court in the capital Abuja, army spokesman Colonel Timothy Antigha said in a statement issued late Tuesday.

The proceedings come two weeks after 12 soldiers were given death sentences for mutiny, after shots were fired at their commanding officer in Maiduguri, the main city of restive northeastern Borno state, in May.

Antigha did not say how many soldiers would be tried on Thursday.

But the newspaper The Punch reported that 60 low-ranked soldiers were going before the court, accused of mutiny for refusing to be deployed in Maiduguri for an "operation". They have all said they are not guilty of the charge.

Nigeria's army has been under pressure to end the bloody Boko Haram insurgency that has claimed thousands of lives, made tens of thousands of others homeless and seen the militants make territorial gains in the northeast in recent weeks.

Last month, dozens of Nigerian soldiers refused to take part in an offensive to try to retake the captured Borno town of Gwoza, which the Islamists claimed as part of an Islamic caliphate.

Soldiers' wives had also demonstrated at the gate of a military base in Maiduguri trying to stop their husbands from heading to Gwoza.

Frontline troops have frequently complained of a lack of adequate weapons and equipment to fight the rebels.

President Barack Obama has decided to keep Myanmar on the list of nations that are subject to US sanctions over its use of child soldiers.

The decision, announced on Tuesday came despite signs of progress in the discharge of under-age recruits from the formerly military-ruled nation's armed forces, known as the Tatmadaw.

A US official said that Obama had not granted Myanmar a waiver from the sanctions applied under the Child Soldier Prevention Act (CPSA).

The law prevents US military assistance to or the sale of licences for commercial military sales to cited nations.

In his annual determination, Obama also declined to grant waivers to Syria and Sudan, which like Myanmar were among nine states named on a CPSA list released by the State Department in June.

Obama did however grant waivers under the law to Rwanda, Somalia and Yemen.

He granted partial waivers to the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of Congo and South Sudan.

The United Nations praised Myanmar last week for making progress in thinning the numbers of child soldiers in the ranks of its armed forces.

The military released 109 children and young people from service, in the largest single release of child recruits since the formerly junta-ruled nation committed to ending the recruitment and use of children in June 2012.

A total of 472 children and young people have been released since then as the military has slowed -- but not yet completely halted -- its use of children.

There are no verifiable figures on how many children are currently serving in Myanmar's huge military, which has faced a slew of accusations over rights abuses, including the forced recruitment of children to work as porters or even human mine detectors.

A quasi-civilian regime led by former general Thein Sein has steered Myanmar out of decades of isolation and has won the support of the United States, which has lifted many economic sanctions imposed on the former junta.

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