Text Only
Search

 
Chad Schools Try to Stop Child Soldier Recruitment


15 May 2007
Tran report - Download 259k audio clip
Listen to Tran report audio clip

Just this past week, Chad's government admitted there are child soldiers in its army. But schools along the troubled eastern zone, near Sudan, have long known that, when a child suddenly disappears from the classroom, chances are he may have joined one of the fighting groups. Phuong Tran visits one school, 60 kilometers from the Sudanese border, to see how its educators are trying to stop children from becoming young soldiers.

Until recently, this primary school in Habile, Chad, had 300 students.

But, after waves of violence forced families from surrounding villages to seek safety in Habile, more than 1500 students now fill the blue classroom tents in the desert.

Many of the teachers come from the displaced community and most of the new students have never before attended school.

Here, the students face bigger challenges than just memorizing their multiplication tables.

Attacks often force the school to cancel classes.

To help track students during these waves of violence, Jesuit Relief Services' School Project Director Gonzalo Sanchez Teran helped create a student registration system that started last month.

Teran says this is one way schools can protect children from the many armed groups that look for young soldiers.

"We can control when they are not there," he said. "We follow what is going on. What happens with the kid [who] has not gone to school one, two days? Why is he not there? Go to visit the families. Talk to them. Talk to the teachers and try to get him back to school."

He says schools in Chad do not normally have registration processes, which has made it hard for teachers to track students.

For example, in the nearby community, Gouroukoum - home to more than 10,000 displaced Chadians - one man remembers when his grandson did not come home from school, three years ago.

The 57-year-old man does not give his family's name, to protect his grandson.

The man says he learned his grandson, then 14-years-old, had secretly joined the Chad national army.

The year before, Janjaweed militia had killed the boy's father.

After having lost his only son, this man says there is nothing he can do to bring home his only grandson from the fighting.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Humanitarian Workers Face Extreme Challenges in Chad
Health Conditions Deteriorate in Chad's Camps for Displaced
Health Workers Worried about AIDS in Chad's Refugee Camps
Displaced Chadians Wait for Return to Burnt Village
Chad Signs Agreement to End Child Soldier Recruitment
 
  Top Story
Bush, Hu Discuss Human Rights, Taiwan

  More Stories
Iran Tests Missiles Amid Tensions with US, Israel
Rich and Developing Nations Make Pledge on Climate Change
US Presses for Zimbabwe Vote at UN Security Council  Audio Clip Available
Commission Recommends New US War Powers Act   Audio Clip Available
US, Czech Republic Sign Controversial Missile Radar Deal  Audio Clip Available
Iraq Increases Pressure on US to Accept Troop Pullout Timetable
Instability, Uncertainty, Fuel Pakistan, Afghan Attacks  Audio Clip Available
Northern Iraq's Kurdish Region Seeks Tourists  Audio Clip Available