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EX-GIRL SOLDIERS HIDDEN BEHIND
A VEIL OF FEAR AND DENIAL
December 12, 2003 (IRIN Analysis) How many
young girls were used by Angola's warring parties during its 27-year
war is anyone's guess.
Denial - by both sides - and fear of discrimination and stigma among
former girl soldiers continue to stand in the way of any effort
to come up with precise figures.
Both the government and the former rebel group, UNITA, have in the
past denied recruiting child soldiers. However, Human Rights Watch
(HRW) has claimed that minors were widely used by both sides during
the conflict. The exact number remains a contentious issue, but
conservative estimates put the number of children who bore arms
for UNITA at 6,000. HRW has noted that the actual figure was probably
much higher.
The refusal to acknowledge the role played by child soldiers, especially
girls, during Angola's hostilities has complicated efforts by aid
groups to address the problem.
Christian Children's Fund (CCF) in Angola is one of the few NGOs
that have attempted to tackle the needs of children who participated
in the war, but it says it has had to broaden the scope of its project
to include all children, not only child soldiers.
The CCF director in Angola, Vivi Stavrou, told IRIN: "Our programmes
targeting children in Angola have a broad focus. We are interested
in the impact war has had on all children, especially since the
majority of children have in some way or the other been victims
of civil war. We would hope that within these programmes the needs
of so-called 'child soldiers' will be identified and addressed."
HRW uses the definition of a child soldier adopted at a UN Children's
Fund-backed international symposium in Cape Town, South Africa,
in 1997. According to that definition, a child soldier is "any
person under 18 years of age, who is part of any kind of regular
or irregular armed force or armed group in any capacity, including
but not limited to, cooks, porters, messengers, and those accompanying
such groups, other than purely as family members".
While research into boy soldiers has received attention, very little
has been reported on the plight of girls, who were often used by
UNITA as cooks, domestics, and porters.
There have also been reports that women and girls were given to
UNITA commanders and visitors and forced into sexual relations.
Other girls were forced into marriages with UNITA combatants. HRW
contends that refusals were met with punishment, and attempts to
escape often meant death.
A report released soon after Angola's April 2002 ceasefire by the
Pretoria-based Institute for Security Studies (ISS), noted that
girls aged as young as 13 were used as porters, camp followers and
concubines by UNITA. "Indeed, girls were often required to
render sexual services and the majority are abducted for the primary
purpose of serving as 'wives' to the male soldiers."
HRW said girls were often the victims of sexual abuse by government
soldiers in the field, and occasionally were obliged to provide
services.
However, the rights group was unable to document the use of girls
as soldiers by government forces.
Stavrou explained that the stigma associated with the abuse women
and girls suffered during war has made it difficult to formulate
programmes targeting this vulnerable group.
"It is a lot more difficult to determine just how many girls
had been forced into marriage with soldiers," she said. "Often
young women are afraid to reveal their involvement in the war, for
fear that they will be discriminated against by community members.
"Often research is gathered from word of mouth, and when these
former girl soldiers are approached they shy away from questions
which probe their past lives. It would seem they would rather let
it go."
She noted that girls who may have participated as active combatants
with UNITA also confronted severe challenges when reintegrating
into family and society.
According to Stavrou, many a young girl who had seen combat may
have had to conceal the role she played, and adopt the subservient
roles that custom demands. "For fear of total rejection by
her husband's family, [she] must pretend to be the gentle, soft-spoken
and submissive woman that her civilian counterpart is."
In an attempt to shed light on the role of women and girls during
the war, CCF has commissioned research into the issue to provide
a basis for interventions.
"We expect the research to take some time, given the constraints,
but the results are likely to produce a clearer picture of what
is needed, and how the aid community can assist," Stavrou said.
Many of the young women in demobilisation camps at the end of the
war highlighted the need for education, HRW noted following a series
of interviews in 2002. "Currently attending classes run by
adults in the camps, they hoped to resettle in their home communities
and return to primary school," HRW said.
[This article is part of an IRIN web special on the issue of
child soldiers published today. In addition to this story, the web
special includes a special report on the issue of child soldiers,
other country-specific features, background documents and links
to resources available for further reading on the Internet. To access
the web special please go to: www.IRINnews.org/webspecials/childsoldiers/]
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200312120082.html
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