Kids with Guns
Stacey Dooley explores the issue of child soldiers in the Democratic Republic of Congo's civil war, where an estimated 30,000 children have been used during the 14-year conflict.
Stacey Dooley returns with a moving and insightful documentary exploring the issue of child soldiers in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where an estimated 5.4 million people have died in the civil war.
An estimated 30,000 children have been used as soldiers during the 14-year conflict in the DRC and no one knows how many thousands are still in the forests, enslaved by armed militias. Stacey meets kids who have been soldiers. She goes to a rescue centre where boys and girls arrive daily, rescued from guerrilla militia units as well as the Congolese National Army. She befriends one boy, 16-year-old Patrick, who was kidnapped when he was just 12. He tells her how he was forced to kill people and was even made to drink their blood to give him magic powers.
Stacey meets other boy soldiers and hears their terrifying experiences first hand. Accompanying a local charity, she travels to a frontline Congolese National Army camp where she helps rescues two teenage boy soldiers. On their way to the rescue centre, they reveal to her that they've been living as soldiers, deep in the forest, since they were nine and ten years old.
Stacey takes one boy home to be reunited with his family he hasn't seen for more than three years. He was taken away by the militias, forced to fight and kill and now neither Stacey nor the boy know how his family and the villagers will react to his return.
Stacey witnesses for herself the terrifying complexities of war where young kids have been manipulated to commit atrocities, but who still have to return to living a normal life again.
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Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Stacey Dooley |
Executive Producer | Mark Rubens |
Executive Producer | Tim Quicke |
Producer | Fiona Lloyd-Davies |
Director | Fiona Lloyd-Davies |
Broadcasts
- Thu 7 Oct 2010 21:00
- Fri 8 Oct 2010 01:15
- Tue 12 Oct 2010 02:45
- Tue 19 Oct 2010 04:10
- Mon 25 Oct 2010 02:30
- Mon 1 Nov 2010 22:30
- Tue 2 Nov 2010 03:45