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How Does International Law Protect the Children of a Revolution or a War?

Eszter Kirs-2006-01-01-Repository of the Academy's Library (Library of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences)

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How Does International Law Protect the Children of a Revolution or a War?"My mother was raving, begging me to stay at home, asking how I dare to go, they would shoot me dead.Poor mother, she was begging in vain, I went back" (Pl Kabelcs, a former "kid of Pest")The recent study is dedicated to the memory of those heroic young boys and girls who put their lives on risk for the noble aim of the independence of Hungary, and who showed unique courage in the course of hostilities.I.The majority of the insurgent groups fighting against the communist regime in 1956 were composed of working young people, there were also students joining the fights, but even a lot of teen-agers took up arms to fight against the regime.They used primitive weapons of war, such as small arms or benzene bottles against the Soviet tanks.Later they gained weapons from the police offices, barracks or disarming police officers and soldiers.The insurgent groups usually operated separately, they cooperated with each other

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How Does International Law Protect the Children of a Revolution or a War?"My mother was raving, begging me to stay at home, asking how I dare to go, they would shoot me dead.Poor mother, she was begging in vain, I went back" (Pl Kabelcs, a former "kid of Pest")The recent study is dedicated to the memory of those heroic young boys and girls who put their lives on risk for the noble aim of the independence of Hungary, and who showed unique courage in the course of hostilities.I.The majority of the insurgent groups fighting against the communist regime in 1956 were composed of working young people, there were also students joining the fights, but even a lot of teen-agers took up arms to fight against the regime.They used primitive weapons of war, such as small arms or benzene bottles against the Soviet tanks.Later they gained weapons from the police offices, barracks or disarming police officers and soldiers.The insurgent groups usually operated separately, they cooperated with each other

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LawPolitical science

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