A 10-year-old Afghan boy who was declared a hero after fighting the Taliban has been shot dead by insurgents while on his way to school, officials said on Wednesday.
The deputy police chief of Uruzgan province, Rahimullah Khan, said the boy, Wasil Ahmad, was killed in Tirin Kot, the capital of the southern province.
The boy had fought the Taliban alongside his uncle on many occasions, Khan said. Photographs on social media showed ten-year-old Ahmad holding an automatic weapon and wearing uniform and a helmet.
Khan said that unknown gunmen he referred to only as insurgents had killed the boy near his home. Ahmad’s uncle was formerly a Taliban commander who changed allegiance to the government and was appointed local police commander in Khas Uruzgan district, Khan said.
The use of child soldiers is illegal in Afghanistan, but the charity Child Soldiers International says both government forces and insurgents have been recruiting minors for years.
In a report presented to the U.N. Security Council’s working group on children and armed conflict, the London-based charity said children were recruited by the Afghan National Police and the Afghan Local Police for reasons that included a sense of fulfilling filial duty, patriotism and honor.
But the main reason was poverty, it said in the June 2015 report. It said that in May last year the charity found that half of national police check posts in Tirin Kot “were staffed with visibly younger officers,” who all admitted they were under 18 years old.
“They had been performing all responsibilities of a police officer, which included securing check points and engaging in combat for the last few years,” the report said.
The Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission laid blame for the boy’s death with his family, the government and the Taliban, a militant group that has been fighting a 15-year insurgency. Spokesman Rafiullah Baidar said that local police had hailed the boy as a hero after he battled a Taliban siege following the death of his father in fighting.
“Possibly he took up arms to take revenge for his father’s death, but it was illegal for the police to declare him a hero and reveal his identity, especially to the insurgents,” Baidar said. “One side made him famous and the other side killed him — both sides ignored the law and acted illegally,” he said.
Afghanistan ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1994, committing the country to end the recruitment and use of child soldiers. The Child Soldiers International reports says that in Kunar, Logar and Zabul provinces — all troubled by insurgency — “10 percent of law enforcement officials are suspected to be underage.”
Although statistics are not available, recruitment is believed to be highest where the insurgency is strongest, notably the southern provinces of Kandahar and Helmand, and provinces bordering Pakistan, including Paktiya, Khost and Paktika. Children are also used by the Taliban in active combat, as spies and as suicide bombers, the report said.
It cited a number of cases, including the attack last year on the French Institute in Kabul during a packed performance that killed at least two people and wounded another 20.
Children recruited into the armed forces or insurgent groups are vulnerable to sexual abuse, Child Soldiers International said.
Despite a decree from President Ashraf Ghani last February criminalizing underage recruitment into the armed forces, the government had “failed to implement proactive mechanisms to identify, verify and release children” who had been recruited, the report said.