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Congo's
child soldiers face tough road to recovery
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Voice of America
November 10,
2007
Muhazi, RwandaTens of thousands of children have been abducted and forced
into service by a myriad of armed groups in Congo's chaotic eastern
provinces. Many of them are Rwandan boys who were born in Congo
following the genocide. On returning to their native Rwanda, the
boys face a long road to recovery. Noel King has this report from
Muhazi, Rwanda.
Like most children, the boys at the Muhazi center for demobilized
child soldiers, just want to have fun.
But after spending years in the service of eastern Congo's armed
groups, the biggest struggle for former child soldiers, is behaving
like a child.
Habimana, 13, arrived at the center two days ago, after spending
a year with a Congolese militia group known as the Mai Mai.
Habimana says he had the rank of private in the Mai Mai and was
the armed guard for a captain. He says the Mai Mai did not abduct
him, but that he joined the militia. After his father died one year
ago, he had nowhere else to go. He says the Mai Mai was the safest
place to be.
Habimana left the Mai Mai after he was shot in a gunfight. The
Mai Mai took Habimana to a hospital, where doctors handed him over
to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
The ICRC works to find the families of Rwanda's demobilized child
soldiers. Until their families are found, the boys stay at Muhazi
camp, run by the Rwandan government.
Ally Mugema is a social worker at the Muhazi center. He explains
that it is difficult for the boys to re-adjust to civilian life.
"When they are with the armed groups in the forest, they are
brutal, they are aggressive, they steal using arms," he noted.
"When they are looking for food, they have to use force. A long
period in that kind of behavior, it tends to be conditioned. They
cannot go in the community with such behavior."
Mugema told VOA that when the boys arrive they marvel at the
things that the center provides, like their own shoes and mosquito
nets.
The boys are taught how to brush their teeth and the importance
of bathing daily.
The center employs teachers who provide the boys a basic
education and counselors who urge them to talk about their
experiences as child soldiers. Ally Mugema explains.
"We teach literacy and numeracy. We try to teach them how to read
and write. They also do counseling for those traumatized," he
explained. "We teach them how to do some home activities like
sweeping, like washing clothes, like washing saucepans, so by the
time they are in the community with their parents, if they are given
such an activity, they don't find it so new and complicated."
Still, some habits exhibited by the former child soldiers are hard
to break.
In the afternoon, the boys are released from school and they have an
opportunity to play. Instead, they hang about in small groups.
Unlike other boys their age, they seem unsure of what playtime
means.
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