DR Congo: Fremskridt i arbejdet med at resocialisere børnesoldater

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UNICEF alene har hjulpet flere end 33.000 tidligere børnesoldater ud af væbnede grupper siden 2004. Manglende fødselsregistrering i DR Congo er en af de store udfordringer i arbejdet med at genforene de tidligere børnesoldater med deres familier.

NAIROBI, 16. januar 2012 (IRIN): A partnership of humanitarian organizations working with community volunteers in South Kivu, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), has helped demobilize thousands of children formerly associated with armed groups in the province, says the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

“Children are the first to suffer from the burden of conflict; they are caught up in violence as victims of sexual assaults; they lose their families and homes as a consequence of constant migration and they are involved in combat as perpetrators of the conflict,” Cornelia Walther, UNICEF’s chief of communication in the DRC, said.

Walther said 101 children aged between 11 and 17 years were currently in the Centre of Transit and Orientation (CTO) in Bukavu, South Kivu’s provincial capital, following their demobilization from armed forces or groups.

At least 33,000 children have been demobilized across the country with UNICEF’s assistance since 2004, according to Alessandra Dentice, UNICEF’s chief of child protection in the DRC.

CTO is managed by the Congolese association, Bureau des Volontaires pour l’Enfance et la Sante (BVES), which has helped to demobilize more than 2,500 children since 2002.

Who does what

While UNICEF funds the programme and CTO oversees the demobilization process, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) undertakes family tracing and provides medical support; a network of 34 foster families hosts youth close to their homes in remote areas of the province; community volunteers regularly monitor the reintegration process; and, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) provides food for the children at CTO.

According to the UN, an estimated five million people in the DRC have been killed by war or disease since 1998.

Irregular birth registration across the vast country is one of the major challenges in demobilizing children. A 2010 UNICEF survey indicates that fewer than one in three Congolese children has a birth certificate.

Murhabazi Namegabe, director of BVES in Bukavu, said recently: “Administratively, these children do not exist. How do you prove to a commander that his soldier is a minor, if even the child itself does not know his age?”

Many children come from areas where the conflict continues, Namegabe said, adding that such children returning home faced the likelihood of being enrolled in armed groups again. “Every day when a child can be saved is a successful day,” he said.

“There are children who do not want to return home because they are ashamed of what they have done; and finally there are families who refuse to take their children back – because they are afraid of what they have become,” Namegabe added.

Læs videre her: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=94655