Not Child’s Play

Nepali Times issue #192 16-22 April 2004

The Maoist militia was made up of children, women and even the elderly. Across western Nepal, 10-year-olds in combat fatigues, carrying guns, socket bombs or grenades was a common sight. Maoist child soldiers now have their own children.

Many of them have since the end of the war spoken against their recruitment and how they were discarded once the rebels joined mainstream politics and attained power. Excerpt of the report from Jumla published 20 years ago this week on issue #192 16-22 April 2004:

Rajukala Rawat of Jumla is only 10-years-old but she already has a nom de guerre: Comrade Samjhana. When we spoke to her, she was carrying two grenades and told us her job was to sit by the trail and fling them at any army patrol passing by. "If the enemy come, we are supposed to throw it and run away," she told us matter-of-factly.

Her friend Serena Buda is known as Comrade Sirjana, and she is 11-years-old. The two form part of a six-member sentry, all armed with grenades. Serena tells us defiantly: "Today we are carrying grenades, but when we grow up we will take part in attacks on Royal Nepali Army bases."

Neither Serena not Rajukala seem to know what or why they are fighting. When asked they reply: "To defeat imperialism." But they don't seem to know what imperialism is and just repeat what they were taught in their training camp.

The head of the 'people's government' of Jumla, Gajendra Mahat has a bodyguard: 14-year-old Comrade Bimarsha. He was studying in grade eight in the Raralihi Secondary School last year when the Maoists forced him and 25 other classmates to join the 'people's army'. "In the beginning I was reluctant, I wanted to study, but later I went along," Bimarsha told us. Twelve of those abducted managed to get away, but there is no escape for Bimarsha. He knows the Maoists will come after him or his family if he does.

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