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Pro-government militias in parts of Afghanistan are believed to be recruiting underage boys and sometimes sexually abusing them in an environment of criminal impunity, local people and human rights organizations say. In a bid to counter the intensifying insurgency, the Afghan government and US/NATO forces have been setting up controversial community-based militias, such as the Afghan Local Police, in insecure provinces. To date, thousands of men have been recruited to such bodies in Kunduz, Baghlan and Kandahar provinces, says the Interior Ministry. "The militias and commanders are hiring young, underage boys in their ranks for different illicit purposes," said Haji Abdul Rahim, a tribal elder in the southern province of Kandahar. Another elderly man, Khan Mohammad, accused pro-government militias of kidnapping teenage boys primarily for sexual exploitation. The Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) also said it had received reports of child recruitment by pro-government militias in some provinces. "We're seriously concerned about this," said Hussein Nasrat, a child rights officer at AIHRC, adding that his organization was investigating the issue. "The use and abuse of children by local armed groups is very worrying because they [pro-government militias] fall beyond the formal, legal and disciplinary structures within which the police and army operate," he said. The UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) said it had not received "confirmed information" on the issue, but that it was concerned about the "association of children with such forces" due to their community-based status. NGOs have demanded that the government and US/NATO forces stop using local militias and instead devote greater resources to developing a more professional and accountable police and army. The International Committee of the Red Cross, meanwhile, has said the proliferation of armed actors impedes and threatens humanitarian work in Afghanistan. Child soldiers Children are recruited and used for military purposes by the Afghan national police, as well as the following anti-government groups: Haqqani network, Hezb-i-Islamic, Taliban, Tora Bora Front and the Jamat Sunat al-Dawa Salafia, the UN Secretary-General said in a report in April 2010. Internally displaced and isolated children in conflict-affected areas are particularly at risk of recruitment by non-state armed groups, Radhika Coomaraswamy, a special representative of the UN Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict, said in a February 2010 country mission report. "The recruitment and use of children by both [anti-government] armed groups and national security forces was documented throughout the country by the UN Country Task Force on children in armed conflict between 2008 and 2010," UNICEF's country office told IRIN. In addition to recruiting children as foot soldiers, the Taliban and other insurgent groups are accused of using children as suicide bombers, and forcing them to plant improvised explosives. "Armed opposition groups continue to perpetrate grave violations against children in the context of the armed conflict," said UNICEF, adding that the fragmentation of armed opposition groups was jeopardizing dialogue with them on the issue of child soldiers. Poverty and unemployment are believed to be pushing children into joining armed groups. Extremely low levels of birth registration and weak identity documents are also contributing to the problem, UNICEF said. Sexual abuse War-related sexual violence is another issue which needs tackling, human rights organizations say. Children, particularly boys, are sexually abused by different armed groups and 'baccha baazi' (meaning "boy play", a paedophiliac practice) has been reported among armed forces across the country. Despite assurances by the government that child sexual abuse will be tackled and perpetrators punished, little has been done thus far, according to AIHRC. "This is most probably due to the social stigma attached to the issue as well as the inability of the government to fully control armed group leaders who may be perpetrating such acts," Coomaraswamy said in her report. As a result, cases of the sexual abuse and exploitation of children have rarely been tackled due to impunity and the weak rule of law, AIHRC said. Children are also killed, wounded, detained, displaced and denied access to essential health and education services by the warring parties, human rights organizations say. In the first half of 2010, 176 children were killed and 389 wounded in the conflict - up 55 percent on the same period in 2009, the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan reported. Backed by the UN and other international actors, the Afghan government says it is committed to tackling all the problems which adversely affect children in the context of war. However, human rights bodies such as AIHRC accuse the government of promising much but delivering little.

25 October 2009
Today Afghanistan remains troubled by poverty and violence. The highly repressive Taliban regime was overthrown in late 2001, and a new president, Hamid Karzai, elected in 2004. But the government has limited power outside the capital city of Kabul and the booming drugs trade constantly threatens stability.
Children are especially vulnerable. Schools and social areas have been destroyed, leaving young people with no chance of an education and nowhere safe to play. Many have lost loved ones and have seen terrible crimes. Large numbers in rural areas were intimidated into joining the fighting, while others were forced to work for the soldiers, washing their clothes, cleaning compounds, cooking and carrying weapons.
In 2005 ActionAid set up a disarmament, demobilisation and rehabilitation programme to help ex-child soldiers and war-affected boys and girls gain an education and the skills necessary to help them earn a living and break free from the cycle of violence. The programme offers nine months of literacy and vocational training in subjects such as tailoring, mechanics, carpet weaving and embroidery.
Student Vahidullo in a tailor's shop."We had a lot of problems in the Taliban time," says 18-year-old Vahidullo.
"We were the defenders of our village. I was a child soldier. We didn't have guns all the time but every so often it would be my time to put the Kalashnikov on my shoulder and walk around with it. We were shown how to use it but fortunately I didn't have to."
Vahidullo is now a trainee in a tailoring shop, where he is earning enough money to help send his younger brothers and sisters to school.
"My hope for the future is that I'll be able to take care of my family and get a good knowledge of my trade," he says.
Afghanistan's children of war - Seventeen-year-old Hamida While it is usually boys who are given arms and pushed to the front line of the battle, girls often carry the traumatic scars of war.
"I am attending the literacy class with a classmate whose father killed my father during the conflict in our village," says 17-year-old Hamida Shah.
"But this is the best place for me at the moment compared to the many sad years that I have had to endure. Besides learning to read and write and receiving training to be a tailor, I am also trying to forget the terrible days I had to go through after my father's death."

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