Photo: Rebecca Murray/IRIN.A billboard campaign in Sri Lanka highlighting the plight of girl child soldiers
Source: IRIN
JOHANNESBURG, 12 February 2013 (IRIN) - Girl child soldiers are often
thought of only as “sex slaves”, a term that glosses over the complex
roles many play within armed groups and in some national armies. This
thinking contributes to their subsequent invisibility in the
demobilization processes - in fact, girls are frequently the most
challenging child soldiers to rehabilitate.
The broad categorization of girl soldiers as victims of sexual abuse
obscures the fact that they are often highly valued militarily. While
sexual abuse is believed to be widespread, girls’ vulnerability may
vary, as attitudes toward women differ extensively across militias: In
Colombia, the Marxist-leaning groups the Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Colombia (FARC) and National Liberation Army (ELN) treated female
soldiers as equal to males, while right-wing paramilitary groups were
known to embrace gender stereotypes.
Some have argued that disarmament, demobilization and reintegration
programmes (DDR) are ill-equipped to address the needs of girls. DDR was
designed for adult male combatants, and over the years has incorporated
female combatants, followed by boy soldiers and then girls.
A January 2013 World Bank briefing, Children in Emergency and Crisis
Situations, says: “The use of girls [by armed forces] has been confirmed
in Colombia, DRC [Democratic Republic of Congo], East Timor, Pakistan,
Sri Lanka, Uganda and West Africa. There are some 12,500 in DRC.
However, girls are generally less visible and up to now have hardly
benefited from demobilization and reintegration programmes for child
soldiers.”
“No one knows what has happened after a DDR process to the large
majority of girls associated with the armed groups,” the briefing said.
About 40 percent of the hundreds of thousands of child soldiers
scattered across the world’s conflicts today are thought to be girls,
but the numbers of girls enrolling in child soldier DDR programmes
dwindles to five percent or less.
Girls often conceal their association with armed groups, Richard Clarke, director of Child Soldiers International,
told IRIN. In traditional societies, enrolling in DDR could confirm a
past that imperils their future: “In contexts of entrenched gender
discrimination, and in situations where a girl’s ‘value’ is defined in
terms of her purity and marriageability, the stigma attached to
involvement in sexual activity, whether real or imputed, can result in
exclusion and acute impoverishment,” he said.
Seeking gender equality
Then there is the uncomfortable reality that some conflicts may actually fast-track gender emancipation.
A 2012 report by Tone Bleie of the University of Tromsø’s Centre for Peace Studies
(CPS) explores this issue. During Nepal’s civil war, when Maoists
conscripted “one member per house”, some parents offered their daughters
to spare “sons whom they considered as their life insurance.” Of the
Maoists’ 23,610 combatants at the cessation of hostilities, 5,033 were
female, and of them 988 were girls.
“Female combatants developed a new sense of pride and dignity due to
personal sacrifices, military courage, feats in the battlefield and
prospects of promotion in the ranks,” the report says.
In the wake of Nepal’s 2006 ceasefire, during the cantonment of Maoists
rebels and the subsequent reintegration process, girls and women were
returned “to [the] very low position of women in traditional Nepalese
feudal society,” Desmond Molloy, a panellist at the International Research Group on Reintegration at the CPS, told IRIN.
“Inter-cast marriage, and marriage in general, was encouraged in the
cantonment. This is taboo in Nepali society and proved a major obstacle
for reintegration of young girls back into society, especially when they
have children, as many do. Further there is in [Nepal’s] society a
perception of a promiscuous environment in the cantonment. So many young
girls were viewed with suspicion by their families, rejected by their
new in-laws or ostracized by the community,” Molloy said.
Abdul Hameed Omar, programme manager for the UN Development Programme’s Interagency Rehabilitation Programme,
told IRIN that acceptance of inter-cast marriages was particularly
problematic. “Children have been denied birth certificates, and women
have been denied their citizenship certificates. When the community
knows that a woman has been part of the PLA [People’s Liberation Army],
these women sometimes face a stigma,” he said.
He said attitudes of male Maoist ex-combatants “vary widely” but that
“many voiced opinions that were not in line with their previous [gender
equality] beliefs during the conflict. Other male ex-combatants who
played traditionally female roles during the conflict, i.e., cooking or
childcare, no longer feel that these are appropriate roles for men
outside of the PLA.”
Loss of power
Many Colombian girl soldiers, who fought as equals to their male
counterparts, struggled with the double standards of civilian life.
“For some girls, belonging to an illegal armed group gives them a sense
of power and control that they may not otherwise experience living in a
relatively conservative, ‘machista’ [chauvinist] society,” said Overcoming Lost Childhoods, a Care International report about rehabilitating Colombian child soldiers.
By the end of Eritrea’s 30-year-long liberation war, in 1991, females
comprised between 25 and 30 percent of combatants. The gender-equality
ideals espoused by the Eritrean People’s Liberation Front’s (EPLF) had
proved an attractive lure for female recruits, including some who were
teenagers or younger.
But “many Eritrean female ex-fighters experienced the years of war as
preferable to the time that came afterwards… They had felt respected,
equal and empowered, but this was all lost after the war when women were
pushed towards traditional gender roles,” said the 2008 report Young Female Fighters in African Wars, Conflict and Its Consequences.
Eritrea’s DDR programmes initially tailored economic opportunities for
women to traditional gender roles - basket weaving, typing and
embroidery - but this did not provide a sustainable livelihood. Training
women in traditionally male trades also proved fruitless because
society’s norms ultimately dictated who could get which jobs.
“Furthermore, female ex-fighters had a hard time getting married after
the war as men usually claimed that these women had lost their
femininity during the war. Many male ex-fighters also divorced their
fighter wives for this reason and married civilian women,” the report
said.
Duality
Girl soldiers’ versatility - they serve as combatants, spies, domestics,
porters and “bush wives” - makes them highly valued among armed groups,
which can also increase their difficulty reintegrating into civilian
life.
Despite this, punishments for girls in northern Uganda, such as whipping
or caning, were meted out for the smallest infractions, Linda Dale,
director of Children/Youth as Peacebuilders (CAP), told IRIN.
“There is a strong tendency to force a kind of passivity on girls while
at the same time they are expected to be combatants. This duality, as
well as the effect of sexual violence, makes their rehabilitation more
complicated, in my view,” she said.
The length of captivity also differed between the sexes; average
internment period for girls in northern Uganda was six to seven years,
while boys faced about three years, Dale said. “Because of that, the
effects of the experience, and therefore the need for more assistance in
re-integration, will be higher. For example, many girl returnees are
illiterate because they have been out of school so long.”
Shelly Whitman, executive director of the Roméo Dallaire Child Soldiers Initiative
told IRIN that some girls can be seen as suffering from Stockholm
syndrome, where captives develop a sympathetic association with their
abusers.
“Girls were raped but then given to or chosen by a commander to be a
‘wife’. They are confused about their experiences, their guilt, their
families’ expectations and religious beliefs. Additionally, many have
children fathered by their captors. They are often rejected when they
return home and viewed as non-marriageable material, damaged goods. With
this kind of a homecoming, it creates confusion about your identity and
your self-worth,” she said.
Invisibility
The assumptions and expectations of people operating DDR programmes may also affect girls’ reintegration.
Girl soldiers are often assumed to be “‘following along’, rather than
girls who have been recruited and used, however informally, for military
purposes… These assumptions have resulted in tens of thousands of girls
being literally ‘invisible’ to DDR programmers, although the situation
has improved somewhat in recent years,” said Clarke of Child Soldiers
International.
Phillip Lancaster, former head of the DDR programme for the UN
Organization Mission in DRC, told IRIN, “Boys with guns are easier to
see and easier to fear.” DDR programmes might “ignore girls on the
assumption that they don't present the same threat.”
“My own experience is that girls are often invisible to DDR programmes
that draw narrow categories around the notion of combat,” he said. “It's
tricky to avoid getting caught up in categories as soon as one starts
trying to define parameters of qualification for DDR programmes, and
most of the decisions tend to have a somewhat arbitrary flavour simply
because of the complexity of the subject matter.
“Most of the Congolese armed groups… draw on local community resources…
The definition of girl child soldier in this setting could, in theory,
extend over all the young females in a community who were supporting,
supplying, informing or directly fighting with a relevant armed group.”