Rodrigo Londoño, the director of the FARC party, caused indignation in Colombia on Thursday by rejecting claims his former guerrilla group forcibly recruited child soldiers under 15 years old.
In an interview with pundit Vicky Davila of weekly Semana, Londoño denied his group recruited children younger than 15, which is a war crime, and denied minors were recruited by force.
Romanticizing child recruitment?
The FARC’s former military commander who is also known as “Timochenko,” denied that child soldiers were either recruited under 15 or by force.
Additionally, before becoming the FARC’s military chief, “Timochenko” was in charge of the guerrillas’ recruitment.
FARC director Rodrigo Londoño
If Londoño tells the war crimes tribunal what the former guerrilla chief told Semana, the FARC director could be stripped of his judicial benefits and even be kicked out of the peace process.
Colombia’s war crimes tribunal receives testimonies of former child soldiers
What former child soldiers say
Former child soldiers told the National Center for Historical Memory (CNMH) that the FARC, like all other illegal armed groups, recruited children under 15.
Former child soldier who was recruited at 14
Many of the former child soldiers have confirmed they didn’t enter the guerrilla group under the explicit threat of violence, but that the guerrillas used more sophisticated means like making false promises and veiled threats.
Once the children were in the FARC, some testified, the child soldiers learned there was nothing voluntary about their participation in the war.
Former child soldier who was recruited at 14
In some cases, former child soldiers told the CNMH that at least one commander close to Londoño had a habit of raping his recruits.
Former child soldier about being raped by the FARC’s late #2, “Raul Reyes”
The FARC director and another top commander were scolded by the Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP) about painting too rosy a picture of their guerrilla group.
The JEP made it clear to the former guerrilla leaders last year that the war crimes tribunal expects confessions, not excuses.