Pubdate: Thu, 21 Dec 2000 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2000 The Dallas Morning News Contact: P.O. Box 655237, Dallas, Texas 75265 Fax: (972) 263-0456 Feedback: http://dmnweb.dallasnews.com/letters/ Website: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Forum: http://forums.dallasnews.com/cgi-bin/wwwthreads.pl Author: Tod Robberson CHILDHOOD IS LOST IN COLOMBIA'S WAR Rebels Deny Forcibly Recruiting Youths To Serve In Combat Roles TRES ESQUINAS, Colombia -- It's hard enough to be a 15-year-old anywhere in the world. In rural Colombia, adolescence has a particularly hellish twist. For Giseth, a high school student with an engagingly broad smile, there's the eternal battle against acne and boy problems and lots of homework. Then she has questions about the future, about whether to become a biologist or a veterinarian, and whether Colombia's insurgents will let her live long enough to decide. "Everyone hears the same stories. The guerrillas or the paramilitaries will come and take us away by force," she said, playing with a ponytail she had arranged deliberately askew on the left side of her head. "You think about whether it might happen. You think about it all the time." With Colombia's war intensifying, fueled in part by a $1.3 billion infusion of mostly military aid from the United States, guerrillas and paramilitary groups are searching everywhere for young recruits to serve on the front lines. When volunteers fail to step forward, the "draft" is imposed, and teenagers like Giseth are among the preferred choices for induction, sometimes at gunpoint, human-rights groups say. Others are lured away by the promise of action, adventure and a life free from the encumbrances of parents and schoolwork. But once an insurgent, there are few routes for escape, human-rights groups say. Exposure to wanton acts of barbarity often becomes routine, warping any vestiges of youthful innocence, they add. And new evidence is surfacing to suggest that some teenagers are being sexually abused. "The guerrillas tell you, 'I am your mother. I am your father.' They tell you what to do and when to do it," said another 15-year-old named Constanza. "And no matter what it is, you have to do it ñ even if they tell you to kill another person." The full names of the children who agreed to be interviewed are being withheld for their own protection. The riverside town of Tres Esquinas is governed by the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, the nation's largest insurgent group, which has been fighting the government for more than three decades. The FARC has been the target of most complaints by human-rights groups about the use of minors in combat, although anti-rebel paramilitary militias also reportedly use children in combat. Allegations Denied The FARC says it does not kidnap children or forcibly recruit minors, although it acknowledges that children are among the guerrillas' combat forces. FARC spokesman Andres Paris said the rebels often will take in children orphaned by war. And if a child decides to leave home voluntarily to join the guerrillas, he or she will be accepted into noncombat roles. "We have a rule that says we cannot accept any recruits under the age of 15. Some people think that a youth of 15 is still a boy, but we say that the social drama of Colombia obliges even children of 8 or 9 years old to do many things that do not relate to their age," Mr. Paris said. Nobody knows for sure how many children are serving with the insurgents, but the United Nations Children's Fund estimates the number at 6,500. Colombia's war is only one of 25 conflicts around the world where an estimated 300,000 children under age 18 may be serving in combat roles, according to UNICEF. "We think it is totally unacceptable to have a teenager walking around with guns, fighting," said Carel de Rooy, chief of the UNICEF mission in Colombia. "Such a child should be in school. It's a gross violation of the child's rights to take them out of their normal environment." Colombian authorities say the green-uniformed bodies of teenagers are being encountered increasingly after battles between government forces and the insurgents, particularly the FARC. "The vanguard of the guerrilla fronts is made up of minors, who are being turned into cannon fodder," said Luis Eduardo Cifuentes, Colombia's national human-rights ombudsman. "As such, they are the first to fall" in combat, or to become "instruments of murder," he said. In Tres Esquinas, a town of 500 in southern Colombia, the FARC is the only authority because the town falls within a 16,000-square-mile haven created by President Andres Pastrana two years ago. About 10 youths from the town have left in recent years to join the FARC, local schoolchildren said. Within days of the safe haven's creation, parents inside the zone began complaining to government authorities that their children were being abducted by the guerrillas. Parents of such children rarely agree to be interviewed, saying they fear for their own safety as well as for their children's. Sexual Abuse Suspected Even outspoken children such as Giseth and Constanza say they will not tell everything they know about the rebels' activities in the zone because they fear retaliation. But hard evidence is mounting that the FARC is putting guns into the hands of children as young as 11 and 12 years old. Mr. Cifuentes reported earlier this month that during post-battle autopsies, the bodies of 11 teenage girls fighting with the FARC were found to have had intra-uterine devices, or IUDs, surgically fitted over their cervixes to prevent conception during sexual intercourse. "This is a clear sign of how much the conflict has degraded in the country," he said. A FARC guerrilla, interviewed by the Bogota newspaper El Tiempo this month after he was captured in a recent battle, said that girls typically are required to report to a camp nurse as soon as they are recruited, and that insertion of the IUDs is mandatory. The guerrilla, who was not identified, denied that girls are being sexually abused. He said the IUDs were strictly for contraception in case female fighters become sexually active. Carlos, another 15-year-old in Tres Esquinas, said the normal rules of rebel recruitment are well-known within the town. "They do not recruit here by force, but I have heard of it in other places," he said. "If you decide to go, they make sure you understand all of the rules. For example, if I join up, my parents have 15 days to ask to have me back. But if my parents don't say anything, then I stay with the rebels." He offered one final, chilling observation: "Once you're in, there is no exit. You are with the guerrillas until you die." About a year ago, Giseth said, two of her teenage friends disappeared from her home village, and no one knew what had happened to them. Then one day, as she was passing through a guerrilla checkpoint, Giseth noticed a familiar face. "I looked back, and there they were, my two friends, checking people's documents," she said. Neither she nor the two boys said anything to acknowledge each other, so she had no way of knowing whether they had joined or been forced into service. "They were busy doing their jobs," she said. "I never saw them again." Targeting Youths In at least two cases this year, Colombian mothers have voluntarily given away their sons to foster families after receiving threats from the FARC that the boys would be taken by force, said Julian Aguirre, director of the Colombian Institute of Family Well-being, a government aid agency. In other cases, deeply impoverished families have handed over their children to the insurgents, believing the rebels could offer them a better life, Mr. Aguirre added. The use of child fighters holds distinct dangers for the future of Colombian society, said Mr. de Rooy of UNICEF. The most immediate is that, with more children taking up weapons, combatants are more likely to begin targeting the general population of children, believing them to be the enemy. In August, a group of soldiers out on patrol in northern Colombia opened fire on a group they thought to be guerrillas. The victims turned out to be children on a nature walk. Six were killed, ranging in age from 6 to 12. A military court later absolved the soldiers of wrongdoing, ruling it an accident. A Choice For Some Mr. Aguirre's agency conducted a survey of child insurgents two years ago to determine how many were being held against their will. "We believe that about 70 percent of the youths who join the insurgents do so voluntarily, and the other 30 percent join under pressure," Mr. Aguirre said. "And they join for various reasons. For example, their parents were members of that armed group, so the children decided to join as well. Or because their home life involved a high level of intra-family violence, poverty, sexual abuse." In many cases, he said, the children interviewed described life under combat as an improvement to the conditions they lived under previously. Even so, the psychological damage they suffer can be irreversible. "Participating in war alters your perception of the world and skews your moral structure. It distorts the image of what is good and what is bad," Mr. Aguirre said. "To witness traumatic things, to participate in acts of barbarity, or to serve as a guard over a kidnap victim, creates in the child a permanent sense of guilt and blame," he said. He predicted severe problems in Colombia's future unless some type of counseling program is established to help such children re-enter society. "El Salvador did nothing after its civil war," which lasted from 1980 to 1992, he said. "Now El Salvador is the country with the highest rate of murder and juvenile violence in the world." - ---