TEAR: Remembering Children of War
PRESS RELEASE
November 18
Worldwide more than
250,000 children are fighting in wars and being forced to
witness and take part in atrocities. On Universal
Children’s Day (Friday November 20) TEAR Fund New Zealand
is remembering the children who have been robbed of their
innocence and celebrating the work that is being done by its
partners to help rehabilitate those who have escaped from
armies who have snatched them.
One such project is
Watoto’s Gulu project in Northern Uganda. Recently TEAR
Fund programmes officer, Ian McInnes visited the project and
had the privilege to speak with some of the children who had
been rescued from the ruthless Lord’s Resistance Army
(LRA). For more than 20 years their elusive leader Joseph
Kony, has waged a ruthless campaign of terror against the
people of Northern Uganda.
Mr McInnes said when
Watoto first started in Gulu they discovered three primary
problems: prostitution, abandoned babies and former child
solders. “You could hire a prostitute for 200 Ugandan
shillings (NZ 1.35) or could buy one for 15,000 shillings
(NZ $10.75). If children were not fighting for the LRA, they
were being abducted into it or were fleeing the violence
into Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps or
neighbouring districts, he said. “As a result many missed
out on their basic education.”
Mr McInnes spoke to Okot Sunday, a 14-year-old boy who was captured by the LRA.
“Although he found it difficult to talk about it, he told me he was arrested by the LRA along with his parents and his aunt. His parents were later killed, leaving his aunt to take care of him. He moved wherever the LRA moved until he finally escaped.”
He now lived in the Watoto village and was receiving an education, counselling, and all the care a child should be getting, said Mr McInnes.
“Many of the children who have been captured by the
LRA have been forced to take part in brutal killings and
many of the girls had been sexually abused or forced to
marry and serve members of the army.
Thanks to
support from New Zealanders, TEAR Fund NZ supports Watoto
projects in Uganda, and every year Kiwis flock to see the
Watoto Children’s choir. “Looking at their happy faces
people can see the transformation that has taken place in
the lives of the orphans who have been given a new life in
Watoto villages,” he
said.
ENDS