Children drawn into Afghan conflict: Unicef
KABUL, Nov 23: Afghan children are being recruited as suicide bombers and drawn into the military, a senior official with the UN children’s agency said on Sunday.
But the conflict means that children in more than 60 per cent of the country cannot not be reached by Unicef workers, the agency’s deputy executive director Hilde F. Johnson told AFP on a visit to Kabul.
“It is clear that there are stories and allegations of recruitment on the different sides, but we don’t have enough documentation to say how bad it is,”Johnson said.
A Unicef task force was set up this year to document the problem and Johnson said it was pushing the Afghan government to better verify the ages of the men it was taking into the armed forces.
There have been reports that men under the internationally accepted age of 18 are being recruited.
More than 7,400 under-age soldiers were demobilised in a government programme in 2003, two years after the fall of the Taliban.
There were also cases of children being used as suicide bombers by insurgents but the numbers had not been established, Johnson said.
After the fall of the Taliban, “people were under the assumption that Afghanistan was venturing into the post-conflict phase and that some of the aspects that were hitting children hardest would go down,” Johnson said.
“But I think there is a reality check that has kicked in amongst all players.”—AFP