https://rtd.rt.com/stories/afghanistan-children-pay-price-of-war/




*Robbed of childhood: the cost of war paid for by the children of
Afghanistan*

17 April 2019 15:50

UNICEF once labelled
<https://foreignpolicy.com/2009/11/19/worst-place-for-the-worlds-children-afghanistan/>
 Afghanistan *“without a doubt the most dangerous place to be born.”*The
country has been mired in an endless armed conflict, with bloodshed and
terror attacks a daily occurrence. Against the backdrop of destruction and
poverty, millions of Afghani children are paying a hefty price for the
conflict. Child labour, lack of health care, no access to education, and gender
discrimination <https://rtd.rt.com/films/she-is-my-son/> are among the
daunting problems boys and girls in Afghanistan contend with.
In need of education

For some 3.7 million children in Afghanistan, most of whom are girls,
school remains out of reach. This is due to *“many reasons,”* according to
the country’s education minister, Mirwais Balkhi. While he didn’t specify,
reasons may well include lack of schools and shortage of teachers, as well
as it simply being a long walk to the nearest school, or parents’ fears for
the safety of their children.

Taliban rule denying education to women ended in 2001. Years later the
government passed a law to stop violence and discriminatory practices
against women and girls. However, they still don’t have equal access to
education. Only one in three girls attended school in 2018.

Afghan girls attend a class at the Ishkashim high school for girls in the
north-eastern province of Badakhshan. © Ahmad Masood / Reuters

UNICEF lists discrimination as a factor for the low enrollment of girls,
along with the *“worsening security situation”* and *“deeply ingrained
poverty.”* Child marriage in Afghanistan is another practice that deprives
many girls of an education and a childhood.
Brides before 18

Afghani girls are often pushed to marry before they come of age. Although
the legal age for marriage is 18 for men and 16 for women, a girl’s father
or a judge may permit marriage if the girl is at least 15 years old. The
law is rarely enforced and earlier marriages are commonplace, and so the
reality is grim.

According to the UNICEF report on child marriage in Afghanistan, poor
families often see their daughters as *“economic burdens,”* so marrying
them off means reducing financial strain and getting a bride price.

Sometimes child marriage is used to settle disputes between families in an
illegal custom called baad, in which a girl is given as compensation to a
wronged family. In another tradition, known as baadal, families exchange
daughters for marriage with their sons.
Young breadwinners

Six year-old Zabi collects ready made bricks as he works in a small brick
factory near Kabul airport. © Peter Andrews / Reuters

Dire poverty is driving children as young as five into hazardous and badly
paid labour. To help their families make ends meet, some 2.1 million
children are engaged in labour of various kinds: welding, making bricks,
weaving carpets, carrying loads, selling goods, or simply begging for money
in the street. Most of them skip school and risk their health to scratch a
living in order to survive.

Find out more with our documentaries about Afghanistan
<https://rtd.rt.com/tags/afghanistan/>.

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