Nepal remains in the grip of a nine-year insurgency battle between its government
and Maoist rebels. Thousands of lives have been lost in the conflict, but the most heart-
wrenching victims are often children being used as pawns. Rebel territory, western Nepal, is one of the most remote regions on earth. We came
here to meet the insurgents who are fighting to topple the government of the Himalayan
kingdom. Soon there are no roads, no bridges. The only way to cross this river to enter
the rebel heartland is this box, suspended from a cable, the bridge blown up a long time
ago in the fighting.
Here we were approached by a girl in her school uniform. It quickly becomes clear
she and two friends have been hiding in the jungle since the previous day from the rebels,
they say, notorious for abducting children to become insurgents.
For the past 10 years, these Maoist rebels, among the last in the world, have been
fighting to overthrow the monarchy here and establish a socialist state. More than 12,000
people have died in the fighting, but even more disturbing are the children targeted by
both sides, according to human rights group --- thousands of them, by some estimates,
abducted, tortured, and killed. The government says the rebels kidnap children to recruit
and indoctrinate.
The rebels deny it, calling it slanders spread by the government, but the story of
these children says otherwise. She is 16 and scared, Ganga says she thought the rebels
would kill her. She worries her parents don’t know where she is. She herself doesn’t
know where she is. They have no money and no food. They stay the night at the
villager’s house. Khum is 15. He says that rebels beat students at his school with sticks and stones when some try to escape. Shobba says she worries about her exams, and
worries that rebels will kill her.
The children are in desperate need for help. We abandon our plans to try and meet
the rebels to try to get the children home.
We suspect there may be some rebels among the villagers here who might want to
take the kids away. That’s why we have to get out of here very quickly, and this is how
we are going to do it.
But we may have already been too late. The woman in pink acts in a suspicious
way, leading us to think she may be a rebel. She appeared from nowhere and has already
been in deep conversation with the children, and tried to convince them to go with her.
She claims to be a cousin and says she will take them home through a shortcut in the
rebel territory. Out of hope or more likely out of fear, Shobha and Khum decide to go
with her. But Ganga joins us in the precarious journey to safety across the river, where
the government is in control. Here at the roadside café, Ganga has her first food in two
days. We put her on a bus for home, a two-hour drive and then two more hours’ walk.
It’s been a terrible ordeal for Ganga and she’s far from alone. Increasingly on the
battlefield in Nepal between the government and the rebels are this country’s children.