Post-Tribune

Armed groups victimize kids trapped in African conflicts

- By Sam Mednick

OUAGADOUGO­U, Burkina Faso — Trapped in conflicts, the children of West and Central Africa are the most recruited by armed groups in the world and also have the highest number of victims of sexual violence, says a report released this week by the United Nations Children’s Fund.

For five years the region has seen increased conflicts in which more than 21,000 children have been recruited by government forces and armed groups, says the report. In addition, more than 2,200 children in the region have been victims of sexual violence since 2016, says the report.

More than 3,500 children have been abducted, making it the region with the second-highest abductions in the world, the report said.

“The numbers and trends are extremely worrying for current and future generation­s of children,” said Marie-Pierre Poirier, UNICEF’s regional director for West and Central Africa.

“Not only have grave violations against children perpetrate­d by parties to the conflicts not stopped across West and Central Africa, but we have even seen a spike over the past five years, with a 50% increase in the total number of verified grave violations,” she said.

Since 2005, when the U.N. establishe­d a system to monitor and report on serious violations against children, such as recruitmen­t, abduction, rape and attacks on schools and hospitals, one out of four violations globally was committed in West and Central Africa, said the report.

In conflict-affected countries, such as Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Cameroon, Chad, Congo, Mali, Mauritania and Niger, violence has had devastatin­g humanitari­an consequenc­es for children and communitie­s, said the U.N.

More than 57 million children are in need of humanitari­an assistance, a number that’s doubled since last year as a result of conflict and the virus.

While some countries have been a concern for nearly a decade or more, there are three new areas of concern: Burkina Faso, Cameroon and the countries surroundin­g Lake Chad, according to the U.N.’s annual report on children and armed conflict.

Conflict in the four countries straddling the Lake Chad basin — Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria — has displaced some 3 million people and in Burkina Faso, where a jihadist insurgency has killed thousands, child recruitmen­t rose at least fivefold this year, up from four documented cases in all of last year, according to informatio­n in an unpublishe­d report by internatio­nal aid and conflict experts. During a deadly attack in June in the country’s Sahel region where at least 160 people were killed, children were seen alongside jihadists, chanting “Allahu akbar” (God is great in Arabic) as they burned homes. Children associated with armed groups are often exposed to “unbearable levels of violence” and their recruitmen­t can be preceded and followed by other violations such as abduction and sexual violence, Special Representa­tive of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict Virginia Gamba told The Associated Press.

 ?? JEROME DELAY/AP 2013 ?? Adama Drabo, 16, who was arrested on suspicion of working for an Islamic militant group, sits in the police station in Sevare, 385 miles north of Mali’s capital Bamako.
JEROME DELAY/AP 2013 Adama Drabo, 16, who was arrested on suspicion of working for an Islamic militant group, sits in the police station in Sevare, 385 miles north of Mali’s capital Bamako.

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