The Maoists variously use these young recruits as soldiers, sentries, messengers, cooks, porters andsuppliers. The preliminary training is sufficient for these children to handle light weapons including .303and .22 rifles, country-made socket and pipe bombs, etc., the weapons most widely used by the Maoistinsurgents.
Maoists have intensified the recruitment of children in their armed cadres to fight against the securityforces, and to create 'revolutionary zeal' among the young participants in the People's War. Observers suggestvarious reasons for children being preferred for soldiering: recruitment and maintenance of a child militia isrelatively cost effective; children can more easily be used in hazardous tasks like laying and clearinglandmines; children are also more psychologically malleable, easily motivated and manipulated, and display ahigh level of dedication and obedience.
Not all recruitment of children is coerced. As the United Nations Report on 'Impact of Armed Conflict onChildren' (1996) notes, "One of the most basic reasons for children joining armed groups iseconomic." For orphan children, joining armed groups is attractive and guarantees basic necessities likefood, clothing, and shelter. On occasion, poverty forces parents to offer their children to insurgent groups,in return for money. In many cases, parents' affiliations with the Maoists group results in their children'volunteering to join these Forces.
By and large, the Maoists prefer their 'students' policy' to be implemented through their 'students wing' theANNISU-R, which has played a major role in institutionalizing their cadre base within the student community,including minors. ANNISU-R Central Committee leader, Kamal Shahi, has accepted their ongoing arms trainingcampaign and the existence of a students' military force equal to a battalion in a regular army. The ANNISU-Rhas been active in implementing a campaign for 'one educational institution, one reformed militia', and boaststhat it will soon have a 50,000-strong student militia and 375,000 members.
At least 300 children have been killed in the Maoist insurgency since 1996. Young children in large parts ofthe country have simply stopped going to school, as the Maoists increasingly bring their activities into theschool premises. On February 18, 2003, two students were killed and another injured during a 'firingdemonstration' by the insurgents in a school in Baglung district. Terrorist attacks have not spared schoolseither. On September 8, 2003, in a serial blast in the Kathmandu Valley, one student was killed in a schoolcampus. Engagements with the state's Security Forces also inflict casualties. During a security forceoperation in a school in Madbhara in Doti district on October 13, 2003, for instance, four students and sixMaoists insurgents were killed.
There have been repeated calls by international human rights organizations and concerned citizens' groups todeclare the school areas as 'zones of peace', and to leave the students and children outside the bloody sphereof the current conflict. These pleas have, however, apparently fallen on deaf ears, and present indicationssuggest, if anything, a further intensification of the ongoing Maoist campaign to mobilize children -voluntarily or otherwise - for greater participation in their 'peoples' war'.