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Nepal: Children in the War Zone
by Li Onesto
Revolutionary Worker #1274, April 10, 2005
The following is a chapter from the book Dispatches
from the People's War in Nepal.
Out of Nepal's 23 million people, almost
eleven million are under 16 years old.
Nepalese officials, newspapers in Nepal and
internationally, and various human rights organizations have
claimed that the insurgency in Nepal is responsible for the
deaths of many children and accuse the Maoists of 'recruiting
child soldiers' and using children as 'human shields.' There
have also been widespread reports that thousands of youth
have fled their homes in the countryside, allegedly to avoid
being 'press-ganged' into the People's Liberation Army.
The official policy of the CPN (Maoist) is
that no one under the age of 18 is allowed to join the People's
Liberation Army, and minors who have responded to recruitment
calls have been told they cannot join the PLA and people's
militias. At the same time, the CPN (Maoist) organize youth
under 18 to support the People's War in many other ways. An
article in The Worker (an official publication of
the CPN [Maoist]), says: 'While they have been strictly forbidden
to join people's armed force, they [the minors] have been
organized under Akhil Bal Sangathan, a children's organization
which takes care of the overall development of children, including
their right to express their solidarity to what they consider
is good, including the People's War ...'1
In February 2003, a report by the Child Workers
in Nepal (CWIN) Concerned Center, widely cited in the press
in Nepal and internationally, asserted that: 'The death toll
for children under 16 has reached 96 as a consequence of the
war between the Maoists and the government' and 'nearly 3,000
children have been displaced from their homes and at least
1,500 have been orphaned following the conflict.'2
News articles about 'children being harmed
by the Maoists' assert statistics like: '168 children have
been killed in the Maoist insurrection.' But such reports
don't actually say these children have been killed by the
Maoists. In fact, the government's own statistics show that
it is the police and Royal Nepal Army that have been responsible
for killing thousands of people, including many children.
It was widely reported that, by December
2002, more than 7,000 people had died in the conflict between
government forces and Maoist guerrillas, and that over 4,000
of these deaths had occurred since November 2001. The vast
majority of these deaths were at the hands of the police and
RNA soldiers. Government sources say that of the 4,366 people
killed during the year following November 2001, 4,050 were
Maoists. But as many human rights groups have pointed out,
most of these victims were civilians targeted for their real
or perceived support for the Maoists. Human Rights Watch reported
that in the first few months after the State of Emergency
was declared in November 2001, over 1,300 'suspected Maoists,'
including 'civilians once associated with Maoists as well
as those possessing Maoist literature,' had been killed by
government security forces. Between November 2001 and October
2002, 4,366 people had died in the conflict, compared to around
2,700 deaths in the previous five years.3
In other words, more people had been killed
by the police and RNA in this one year than the total number
killed in the first five years of the insurgency.
Those arguing that the 'Maoists are killing
children' fail to mention that even those human rights groups
that reported that '168 children had been killed in the Maoist
insurgency' also reported that government forces had unjustly
killed many people, including children, using the pretext
of 'skirmishes' or 'encounters' with rebel forces.
A lot of human rights groups, either consciously
or not, help spread disinformation and confusion about the
situation in Nepal by 'evenhandedly' criticizing the government
and the Maoists for 'human rights violations', even though
by their own statistics, the overwhelming majority of those
killed have died at the hands of government forces. But these
groups do cite and chronicle many cases in which the state
has killed children accused of supporting the Maoists. They
have also reported on the abuse of children held in jail on
suspicion of being rebel soldiers.
One RNA officer admitted that in the heat
of battle, government soldiers rarely distinguish between
men, women, and children. One army captain told a reporter,
'Anyone with a gun is an enemy.'4
Furthermore, any discussion about the plight of children in
Nepal needs to look at the semi-feudal and capitalistic system
under which millions of children live in dire poverty and
brutal servitude. This is the very system the Maoists want
to do away with.
For example, in Nepal, there are 32,000 child
laborers working in 1,600 stone quarries. Almost half of these
children fall ill soon after starting to work and regularly
suffer from coughs, backache, fever, visual impairment, and
joint and muscle pain. Almost all of them have had accidents
and injuries while working to excavate and extract stones
and boulders from quarries, loading goods on trucks, or crushing
boulders into gravel. One news article recounted the story
of a 13-year-old boy who goes to school in the morning and
on the way home stops at a quarry site and crushes stones
for hours. He earns between 20 and 30 rupees a day (less than
50 cents), which helps his family of five survive.5
A nationwide study by Tribhuvan University
in Kathmandu reported that more than 27 percent of the children
in Nepal—some 2.6 million children—work as child
laborers and that 60 percent of the children are between 6
and 14 years old. Almost one million work without pay and
many work as bonded laborers, forced to work for an employer
for a specific period of time, without any rights. Deep poverty
is also responsible for the suffering of millions of children
in Nepal. It is estimated that 50 percent of the children
in Nepal are afflicted by malnutrition. And because of the
lack of clean water, sanitary conditions, and health care
in the countryside, many children die of common, curable diseases.6
This article is posted in English and Spanish on Revolution
Online
http://revcom.us
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