In his annual report on 'Children in Armed Conflict', Secretary General Antonio Guterres said the UN continued to receive reports of the recruitment and use of children by armed groups, including the Naxalites, in particular in Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand.
"Children continued to be affected by incidents of violence between armed groups and the Government, in particular in Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand, as well as tensions in Jammu and Kashmir," he said.
"In a troubling development, Maoists were allegedly running several schools in Chhattisgarh and included combat training as part of their curriculum," Guterres said.
Owing to access restrictions for monitoring and reporting, the United Nations was unable to verify the reports of the recruitment and use of children by armed groups, he said.
Armed groups reportedly resorted to abduction and threats against parents in order to recruit children, who subsequently underwent military training and served as messengers, informants or guards in child squads (baldasta).
However, unverified reports suggest that police may be using as well as to separate and reintegrate recruited children formerly associated with armed groups as informants, potentially making them targets for retaliation.
The UN report expressed concern over reports of the recruitment and use of children, including from madrassas, and by armed groups for suicide bombings.
Guterres later said he was appalled that more than 8,000children were killed and maimed in different conflicts in2016.
These unacceptable attacks on children, as well as the continued widespread recruitment and use of children, attacks on schools and hospitals, and sexual violence against children, are detailed in his annual report on children and armed conflict.
He also called on all parties to conflict to engage with the UN to improve the protection of children in line with the relevant Security Council resolutions.
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