By Sanchita Bhattacharya
July 6, 2020
June 20, 2020: At least three children were killed in a mine explosion
in Paikamari village in Ferozkoh city of Ghor Province.
June 18, 2020: A mortar bomb blast inside a seminary in Ishkamish District
of Takhar Province killed nine seminary students. Six students were also
injured in the explosion.
April 1, 2020: A roadside bomb killed six children while they were
travelling with their family in a minivan in Helmand Province.
February 12, 2020: Five children were killed and three sustained
injuries as a mine went off in Dasht-e-Archi District of Kunduz Province.
According to the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan
(UNAMA)’s report, Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict First Quarter
Report: 1 January 31 March 2020, released in April 2020, 152
children were killed (and 265 were injured) in Afghanistan in terrorism-linked
incidents in the first three months of 2020. While the report does not give the
proportion of these casualties inflicted by the Taliban, it does emphasise the
Taliban was responsible for 505 civilian casualties (215 killed and 290
injured). According to partial data compiled by the South Asia
Terrorism Portal (SATP), since April 1, 2020, at least another 28
children have died in such violence (data till July 5, 2020).
UNAMA data indicates that at least 7,059 children have been killed in
Afghanistan between 2009 and 2019.
Meanwhile, the United Nations ‘Annual Report [2019] of the
Secretary-General on Children and Armed Conflict’ released on June 15, 2020,
described the war in Afghanistan as the world’s deadliest conflict for children
in 2019, a status the country has held for five consecutive years. The report
says that 874 children were killed and another 2,275 injured by the war through
2019:
Year |
Children Killed |
2009 |
345 |
2010 |
327 |
2011 |
306 |
2012 |
488 |
2013 |
561 |
2014 |
714 |
2015 |
733 |
2016 |
923 |
2017 |
861 |
2018 |
927 |
2019 |
874 |
Total |
7,059 |
Source: 2009-2019: UNAMA Annual Reports. |
The prominent incidents involving child fatalities in 2019 included:
November 27, 2019: Eight children were killed when the vehicle they were
travelling in hit a land mine in Kunduz Province.
November 4, 2019: Four children were killed in mine blast in an
unspecified location of Baghlan Province.
November 2, 2019: Nine children were killed when a mine exploded as they
walked to school, in an unspecified location of Takhar Province.
July 25, 2019: Three children, along with six women were
killed in a roadside mine blast in the Wazir area of Khogyani District of
Nangarhar Province.
May 9, 2019: Four children were killed in an explosion triggered by an
Improvised Explosive Device explosion in Dawlatabad District of Faryab
Province.
April 14, 2019: Seven children were killed while they were playing outside
their houses, when a discarded mortar shell blew up in Dasram area, a village
in the outskirts of Mihtarlam city in Laghman Province.
Afghanistan is all about never-ending conflict, poverty and devastation,
where children suffer from the unspeakable horrors of four decades of war and
conflict. Fatalities alone are no measure of the quantum of suffering inflicted
on the children of Afghanistan: physical disability, recruitment by militants,
destruction of education system, drug addiction, child labour, physical and
sexual abuse, and the sheer, crippling exposure to the brutalities of war, of
personal loss, and of relentless uncertainty, have scarred generations.
The education system has collapsed across wide areas in Afghanistan.
Schools are often damaged in the constant fighting, and there is a constant
threat of attack on school complexes. According to a May 28, 2019, UN
News report, attacks on schools in the country surged from 68 in 2017
to 192 in 2018. According to a February 18, 2020, United Nations Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) report, as of December 2019, 488
schools had been reported to have been forcibly closed due to insecurity,
affecting around 150,000 children (72,000 girls and 78,000 boys). Uruzgan (204
schools), Paktika (117 schools) and Logar (64 schools) were the top three
Provinces, with the highest number of closed or damaged schools. Moreover, an
estimated 3.7 million children between the ages of seven and 17, nearly half of
all school-aged Afghans, are out of school in the country.
War and destruction of infrastructure has caused extreme poverty in
Afghanistan, and the unceasing conflict has destroyed the institutions meant to
protect children. The high numbers of civilian casualties also indicate the
loss of breadwinners within Afghan families, consequently forcing young boys
and girls to quit school and help to financially support the family. The
resultant crisis of child labour has ruined the lives of many children. With an
estimated 55 per cent of the population living below the poverty line, children
often work to contribute to their family income. According to a July 24, 2019,
report, the increased financial struggle the country is experiencing, as well
as the closure of hundreds of schools due to violent conflict, and poor
enforcement of labour laws have led to an increase in child labour.
Despite billions
of dollars being
pumped in for the protection for children, their condition remains precarious
and their future prospects shabby.
Physical disability caused due to violent incidents is also at
catastrophic levels. An estimated 95 per cent of children with disabilities do
not attend school. The latest United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan
Report, titled, Preserving Hope in Afghanistan: Protecting children in
the world’s most lethal conflict, published in December 2019, revealed that
an average of nine children were killed or crippled every day in Afghanistan in
the first nine months of 2019. The report further added, almost 15,000 children
were injured between 2009-2018, in Afghanistan. The presence of numerous land
mines in the country still results in regular accidents, sometimes even fatal
ones, especially among the very young who often fail to recognise dangerous
sites. Many Afghan children are handicapped due to land mine
explosions. The United Nations has been involved in clearing landmines in
Afghanistan for 29 years, and over that period, has cleared some 730,000
anti-personnel and anti-tank mines at a cost of USD 1.5 billion in Afghanistan.
There is also the persistent problem of drug-addiction among children.
Afghanistan is the world’s largest producer of opium. According to United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime’s World Drug Report, 2020,
Afghanistan is the country where the most opium is produced, accounting for
approximately 84 per cent of global opium production. According to an April,
2019, report, the Taliban has an estimated USD 200 million-a-year opium
trade, and around 60 per cent of Taliban's finances come from the
narcotics trade. Addiction among children wasn't properly counted until 2015,
when the UN reported that 9.2 percent of children up to 14 years old tested positive for one or more type of drugs
and were likely to be active drug users. There is no further data on this
parameter.
Children in Afghanistan have been used as soldiers by the Taliban and the Islamic State-Khorasan Province
(IS-KP). Poverty, unemployment and limited access to basic services, and the
absence of social protection, have been key factors driving children to join
parties to conflict. According to a February 26, 2020, report, the Taliban has
nearly 50,000 children on a waiting list to be suicide ‘martyrs. Their parents
receive thousands of dollars as payment to use their child for this ‘holy
cause’.
A UN report, Children and Armed Conflict in Afghanistan, published
in September 2019, noted,
Armed
groups were responsible for the majority of cases of child recruitment and
use, namely, the Taliban (139), ISIL-KP [IS-KP] (32), Tehrik-e Taliban
Pakistan (17) and unidentified armed groups (23). Children were used in
various roles, such as for planting improvised explosive devices, transporting
explosives, carrying out suicide attacks and participating in hostilities. |
Further,
according to a February 18, 2020, United Nations Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) report:
The
number of children in Afghanistan who will need humanitarian assistance in
2020 has jumped by 40 percent compared to last year, warns Save the Children,
meaning an extra 1.5 million children need support to survive. In 2020, an
additional 3.1 million people will need help, more than half of whom are
children. That takes the total number of children who need some kind of
humanitarian support to 5.26 million, making Afghanistan one of the worst
places in the world to be a child. |
On February 29, 2020, the US and the Taliban officially signed the 'Agreement
for bringing peace to Afghanistan' at Doha, Qatar. Subsequently, it was claimed
that this agreement would ensure enduring peace in the country. Worryingly,
however, developments since then are not indicative of any quick ending to
hostilities in the foreseeable future. The conflict in Afghanistan is likely to
continue, and so will the sufferings of the children, as they have always been
one among the worst victims in any conflict, world-wide
Sanchita Bhattacharya is a Research Fellow, Institute for Conflict
Management
Original
Headline: Children
Under Threat
Source:
South Asia Intelligence Review
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