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AFGHANISTAN
Focus on rehabilitation of child
soldiers

Mohammad Sarwar, a former child
soldier from Imam Sahib district, now makes a living keeping livestock
and writing letters for illiterate neighbours
Sitting around a tailor’s table in a tiny shop,
Najeebullah and his friends say they are proud to have once been child
soldiers because now they are the only literate young people with jobs
in Amirbai village, 35 km north of Kunduz, provincial town of the
province with the same name in the north of the country. The group has
been demobilised as part of a UN-backed programme after several years of
life under arms.
The village was on the front line between the Taliban and northern
alliance forces from 1998 to late 2001 when the hardline regime was
toppled by US-led Coalition forces.
Many children like Najeebullah were forced to join
armed factions when their communities became battlegrounds. Some had to
take up arms to earn food or to protect their families. Others like
Najeebullah, had to bear a weapon as the only male member of the family.
Children coerced into militia groups
“I had no option but to take a gun when I was twelve because every
household had to contribute a man or give the cash equivalent of a
fighter’s salary for a year to the local commander,” the 17-year-old
recalled.
He’s one of an estimated 8,000 child soldiers identified by the United
Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) in post-war Afghanistan. Nearly 4,000
of these children have been demobilised and are actively involved in
some form of rehabilitation under a UNICEF programme. The programme also
addresses the needs of street children who have missed school through
poverty or years of displacement.
Najeebullah never went to school but managed to learn
how to read and write in less than a year after joining an intensive
literacy course which is obligatory for all demobilised child soldiers.
He chose tailoring as a skill he wanted to master and now, six months
later, he earns his living making clothes. He feels he has a future for
the first time in his life.
“I will soon join school as I can read and write now and will also open
my own tailoring shop now that I have acquired a profession,” he beamed
while putting the finishing stitches in a pair of trousers he had made
for a young relative.
Extent of demobilisation
According to UNICEF, up to 4,000 boys, the majority between 14 and 17
years old, have been demobilised and reintegrated in north, northeast,
east and central Afghanistan since the programme was launched in
February 2004.
UNICEF, for the purposes of the rehabilitation programme, define a child
soldier as a young person under 17 who has been, or still is, active in
a military unit with a formal command structure. Each of the demobilised
children then receives a package of support. This starts with
registration in the programme’s database, the issuing of a photo
identity card, medical and psychosocial assessments and briefing
sessions on mine risk and reintegration options.
UNICEF said all demobilised children are also offered voluntary testing
for HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).
Each demobilised child has the opportunity to participate in a number of
reintegration options, including returning to education or enrolling in
vocational training programmes to learn a practical skill. Some opt for
income generation schemes like farming sheep or poultry.
A new start in a new country
Mohammad Sarwar, a former child soldier from Imam Sahib district, a
border town 60 km south of Kunduz, said the reintegration experience had
changed his life and enhanced his status in the community. The
18-year-old is the only breadwinner in his six-member family and lost
his father in a land mine explosion next to their home.
After his father died he had to serve in a military unit, this included
everything from combat to entertaining militia forces in front
positions.
“I had to dance for them to keep morale high — even when bullets and
rockets were whistling past me.” In 1999 Sarwar lost his right hand in a
rocket explosion when he was involved in fierce fighting around Kunduz.
“In the past people hated me and I hated my life. It
was not the war which was terrifying but the inhumane behaviour of
commanders with child soldiers like me,” Sarwar added. The programme has
made him literate and he makes a living writing and reading letters and
invitation cards when there is a wedding party or mourning ceremony.
Sarwar attended a literacy course run by the Child Fund for Afghanistan
(CFA) — an implementing partner used by UNICEF in the northeast of the
country. The disabled former soldier has also been given three sheep and
some seeds to begin farming. With these he earns his living and
supplements it by selling tomatoes grown on a tiny plot of land behind
his house.
According to CFA social workers, some of the young
former soldiers continue to suffer abuse.
“In some villages there are still children who are misused by
commanders. Often they are forced to dance, which is a tradition among
warlords in most parts of the country. Often they're sexually abused,”
Hamiddullah said.
Demobilisation programme to expand
With the expansion of the UN-backed demobilisation campaign, he said the
risk of exploitation was lessening.
“People are very happy and they support the programme, they even
contribute by making their homes available for literacy and other
training,” the social worker said.
“The problem is the existing commanders who are still powerful in the
region, even though they have been decommissioned by DDR,” he noted.
According to UNICEF, of the 40,000 demobilised child soldiers 1,500
children completed the course and 1,100 have already found employment.
More than 1,000 also received competency certificates in literacy.
“The main challenges have been finding reintegration programmes to match
the needs of the young people,” Edward Carwardine a UNICEF spokesman
said.
Currently the programme is operating in 17 provinces, but is set to
expand.
“The next phase, due to start in the summer, will focus on the south and
western regions,” Carwardine added.
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs
27 June 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=47828&SelectRegion=Asia
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