Yes.
Regarding child soldiers, like this issue about consensual and non-consensual, because they are very young and totally unaware, it is probably non-consensual. In the cases of young men who don't have employment, I can give you an example of Afghanistan and the people I talk to.
The other day—and this is a live example—I had ordered some Afghan food, and a young Canadian Afghan who speaks only halting English delivered the food. I have a replica of a Bamiyan Buddha. Bamiyan is a province in Afghanistan, and the Taliban destroyed the Buddha statues—wonderful Buddha statues. I visited the caves. There are no statues now, but I still visited, and you can get replicas. I bought replicas, and it was on my wall at the entrance.
This gentleman asked, looking at that, “Do you know Afghanistan? Have you been there?” I said that I had. Then, in very halting English, he kept talking about how terrible it is in Afghanistan for people, for common Afghanis, and particularly for young people who don't have jobs. They don't have education either. If they don't have money, they can't get any education. Schools are closing as well, and there is no employment. He said, “I am so pleased that I was able to get out of Afghanistan, because I would be a Taliban today. I would join the ranks of the Taliban, because I had no other source of income. I am pleased that Canada took me as a refugee and I am here.”
It is very important, and it is happening everywhere. It's not only there, but even in the European Union. What I have researched and read is that when the refugees from some of the African countries migrate, they go to Arab countries, to the European Union countries. They're not integrated with the society. They're playing by themselves. These are young people, not children exactly, but young people who are playing by themselves—