Coping with a legacy of violence in Sierra Leone



***Learn more about the International Day of the African Child, 16 June
2006: http://www.hrea.org/feature-events/african-child-day.php


MAKENI, Sierra Leone, 15 June 2006 – The decade-long war in Sierra Leone,
which left 50,000 dead, was one of Africa’s most brutal. Atrocities
against women and children were commonplace. The war turned children into
drugged killing machines, giving them power beyond their age.

“These children were given high positions. They were called colonel and
general, and this made them feel like they had power,” said UNICEF Child
Protection Officer Michael Charley.

As countries around the world mark the Day of the African Child tomorrow,
this year’s theme – ‘Stop Violence against Children’ – will have a special
resonance for the children of Sierra Leone.

The Day of the African Child honours the memory and courage of the South
African children killed and injured during the 1976 Soweto uprising, when
thousands of students took to the streets to protest against the inferior
quality of their education and to demand the right to be taught in their
own language.

Thirty years later, the annual celebration is an opportunity to reflect on
progress towards health, education, equality and protection for all the
continent’s children.

During the war in Sierra Leone, 10,000 children were forcibly conscripted
as porters, fighters or sexually abused ‘bush wives’. Soon after the war
ended in 2002, the full scale of the terrible legacy was revealed at
Sierra Leone’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), modelled loosely
on South Africa’s panel on apartheid crimes.

Although the bulk of crimes against children and women in Sierra Leone
were at the hands of the rebel Revolutionary United Front, militia
fighters committed their fair share.

Forgiveness in exchange for the truth is central to the work of Sierra
Leone’s TRC. The struggle for justice is ongoing, as former Liberian
President Charles Taylor languishes in a UN special court in Freetown,
awaiting trial for war crimes at The Hague.

The TRC does seem to have healed some of the wounds, but the real scars
left on children cannot be seen. “The rebels came to every village,
because they wanted to multiply their war instruments. They abducted those
children, they trained them to become rebels and gave them drugs,” said
Bishop Joseph Humper, head of the TRC.

“Now those children are coming back to society and coming to grips with
their childhood state,” added Bishop Humper. “They lost education. They
lost a crucial stage of general psychological development that they were
supposed to go through to become responsible persons.”

Meanwhile, at the Makeni convent for the hearing-impaired, a 17-year-old
boy stands up in front of his classmates and draws a picture of an AK-47.
He cannot speak or hear but still conveys what happened to him during the
war. He points to his head, indicating that he was drugged, and
gesticulates as if he is shooting a gun.

All the children here experienced lost years of unspeakable fear; some
were killers, too.

Today in Sierra Leone, peace signs boldly declare a new era – ‘War
don-don. We love peace’. But violence against children still lurks in the
shadows. Roadside cinemas showing extreme violence and rape scenes
proliferate in the busy alleys of Freetown and other cities. Admittance
costs just a few cents, so the shacks are full of small children.

For the first time in Sierra Leone’s history, however, some help is at
hand for these children. Hidden discreetly in hospitals, new centres have
been set up to help young victims of sexual abuse – though funding for the
centres is fragile. Most rapes go unreported here, but for those brave
enough to seek redress under the law, there are newly trained plainclothes
police men and women who will take up their cases at family support units
attached to police stations.

Although few such cases make it as far as the courts, Sierra Leone is
starting to take the abuse of its children seriously. But real justice is
still a long way off.

UNICEF Press release




[Reply to this message] [Start a new topic] [Date Index] [Thread Index] [Author Index] [Subject Index] [List Home Page] [HREA Home Page]