The decision by a large armed group based in north-east Nigeria to release nearly 900 youngsters has been welcomed by UN
Children’s Fund, UNICEF, which has warned that those freed will need long-term help if they are to lead a normal life in the future.
“Today, 894 children, including 106 girls, were released from the ranks of an armed group called (the) Civilian Joint
Task Force (CJTF) in Maiduguri, north-east Nigeria as part of this group’s commitment to end and prevent the recruitment
and use of children,” said Spokesperson Christophe Boulierac.
According to the UN agency, the children of the troubled region “have borne the brunt of years of conflict”, linked to
an insurgency led by armed extremist opposition groups.
Youngsters ‘witnessed horrors’
“They have been used by armed groups in combatant and non-combatant roles and witnessed death, killing and violence,” UNICEF said in a statement, noting that the CJTF was formed in 2013 to protect communities and help the Nigerian military
fight against separatists.
Friday’s mass-release in regional capital Maiduguri, follows the CJTF’s commitment in September 2017 to end and prevent
recruitment and use of children, as part of a UN-led action plan.
In total, 1,727 children and young people have now been released by the CJTF, and UNICEF says that it has not recruited
any more children since then. Between 2013 and 2017, the UN agency believes that more than 3,500 children have been
recruited and used by non-state armed groups in north-east Nigeria.
Others have been “abducted, maimed, raped and killed”, it says, amid ongoing clashes, mass displacement and alarming
levels of food insecurity.
Highlighting the scale of need in a report released earlier this week, UN humanitarian coordinating office OCHA, said that the organization and its partners reached more than 1.2 million people with food security assistance across
Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states in March.
Nearly 20,000 children under the age of five were treated for severe acute malnutrition, OCHA said in a statement,
adding that humanitarians provided protection services to 87,000 people, while more than half a million people gained
access to sanitation facilities.
Released youngsters need training, education to reintegrate
“The children and young people released today will benefit from reintegration programmes to help them return to civilian
life and seize new opportunities for their own development,” Mr. Boulierac told journalists in Geneva. “Without this
support, many of the children released from armed groups struggle to fit into civilian life as most are not educated and
have no vocational skills.”
At least 9,800 people formerly associated with armed groups, as well as vulnerable children in communities, have
accessed rehabilitation services between 2017 and 2018, the UNICEF spokesperson added.
Speaking in Nigeria, Mohamed Fall, UNICEF Representative and Co-chair of the UN Task Force on Monitoring and Reporting on Grave Child Rights Violations (CTFMR) reaffirmed his commitment to liberating and helping youngsters caught up in the conflict.
“We cannot give up the fight for the children, as long as children are still affected by the fighting. We will continue
until there is no child left in the ranks of all armed groups in Nigeria,” he said.
'Finally put an end to recruitment and use of children' - Gamba
The UN Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict, Virginia Gamba, welcomed the latest release from the CJTF.
“Today, hundreds of freed children will get to go home with their family and will begin a reintegration process that
will enable them to fully regain their place into their communities", she said.
"I call on the CJTF to continue to take tangible measures to better protect children and to release all children from
its ranks and finally put an end the recruitment and use of children, as per its commitment with the United Nations",
she added.
Ms. Gamba also called on the international community to provide the necessary resources to UNICEF and its partners "for
the reintegration of these children, so they can benefit from comprehensive reintegration services."