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- <text id=90TT1568>
- <title>
- June 18, 1990: Burma:Junior Rambos
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 18, 1990 Child Warriors
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 41
- COVER STORIES
- BURMA
- Junior Rambos
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Alessandra Stanley
- </p>
- <p> The Karens may be the most civilized guerrillas on earth.
- At army headquarters in Manerplaw, deep in the jungle of Burma,
- enlisted men maintain neat parade grounds, teak officers'
- quarters, even the occasional flower bed of marigolds and
- roses. Bugles sound morning reveille, and new recruits march
- to target practice under a gatepost that carries a
- black-lettered sign, GIVE ME LIBERTY OR GIVE ME DEATH. Even in
- Komura, a muddy labyrinth of trenches and bunkers 100 miles
- south, where some 500 Karen soldiers have been trapped in battle
- for months with the Burmese army, the men are high-minded. The
- only pinups on the walls are chaste photographs torn from Thai
- mail-order catalogs of ladies in bridal gowns and taffeta tea
- dresses.
- </p>
- <p> Forty-one years of fighting for independence have worn down
- the rough edges of revolution like a well-pumiced stone. The
- largest of half a dozen tribes that rebelled against the
- republic of Burma in 1948, Karen insurgents have spent the past
- four decades waging war against Rangoon to establish an
- independent state in the southern part of the country. Of the
- 3 million ethnic Karens living in Burma, one-fourth have fled
- to jungle villages in the south, where the 5,000-man Karen army
- is based. Ignored or forgotten by most of the world, the
- anticommunist Karens rate attention only from a few evangelical
- Christian charities and Soldier of Fortune magazine.
- </p>
- <p> Spread throughout the jungles that straddle Burma and
- Thailand, the rebels have settled into a life of well-ordered
- predictability. They subsist on teak logging and farming,
- attend church, send their children to school and adhere to a
- strict penal code (adultery carries the death penalty). Though
- there is no electricity at Manerplaw headquarters, a generator
- supplies power for that most prized necessity, a VCR. The
- leaders tend to be melancholy idealists, sad-eyed dreamers who
- pass evenings drafting and redrafting a Karen constitution for
- use in the improbable event that independence will be achieved.
- Gentle in gesture and speech, the Karens do not seem capable
- of nurturing hatred. Nor do the guerrillas seem capable of
- dispatching their children to the front lines to fight, and
- die, alongside the men. But they do.
- </p>
- <p> It is noon, and another round of shelling has begun in
- Komura. As the earth shudders, men drop into bunkers near a
- thick stand of bamboo trees. Nobody talks, but with each blast,
- the muscles in the men's faces tighten. Saw Klee Moo's face,
- however, remains smooth. When a rocket explodes nearby, shaking
- the ammunition crate where Saw Klee Moo crouches, he smiles.
- Saw Klee Moo is nearly 15 and certain that he will never be hit
- by a bomb.
- </p>
- <p> When the shelling subsides, soldiers stretch out in their
- shelters, supine and seemingly impassive. Only the incessant
- chewing of betel nuts hints at stress. When they are not
- chewing, the men smoke cheroots. And when their tobacco runs
- out, they smoke rolled-up pieces of newspaper. Saw Klee Moo
- dangles a stick of paper out of the side of his mouth like a
- fat cigar, but he keeps it unlighted. The children fighting
- alongside their elders are too young to have developed nervous
- habits.
- </p>
- <p> A week earlier, Saw Klee Moo was part of a 15-man
- reconnaissance patrol that was ambushed in the jungle by a
- six-man Burmese platoon. The Karens out-numbered the Burmese
- but, taken by surprise, didn't have time to seek cover. Saw
- Klee Moo and the others just froze and shot at the enemy,
- raking everything in sight with automatic fire. He doesn't
- remember how long he stood there, firing madly, but eventually
- the Burmese withdrew, dragging their wounded with them. It was
- the first time Saw Klee Moo had encountered the enemy face to
- face. Asked if he was frightened, he shrugs.
- </p>
- <p> Major Than Maung, 54, the reserved and dignified officer in
- charge at Komura, could not be more insistent. Soldiers are not
- drafted until the age of 15, he says. When children show up in
- war zones, most are sent back. But why not send them all back?
- Pause. "It depends on the situation," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Sometimes the situation requires taking on anyone willing
- to fight--and even those less than willing. Two years ago,
- a Karen brigade sneaked into a refugee camp in Thailand at
- night, rounded up all the males ages 14 to 40 and marched them
- back to camp. The remaining villagers grew hysterical, and
- leaders of a small group of Seventh Day Adventist and Baptist
- missionaries, who supply refugees with school books, Bibles and
- food, protested to General Bo Mya, president of the Karens. The
- next day the conscripts were returned, and the missionaries
- received a note of apology from the brigade commander.
- </p>
- <p> Stress takes its toll on civility. A brutal assault by the
- Burmese troops that September left 40 Burmese and two Karens
- dead and made something in Major Than Maung snap. A few days
- later, a journalist visited Komura and found the major resting
- quietly in his bunker, surrounded by dozens of skulls mounted
- on stakes and planted in tidy rows. When a young Karen soldier
- playfully stuck a cheroot in the grinning teeth of one skull,
- the major chased him away. Then he grew quiet again and didn't
- want to be disturbed.
- </p>
- <p> Kyaw Lin, 11, is so tiny that the barrel of his M-16 rifle
- is sawed in half so he can carry it. It is still almost as long
- as he is. He has a florid tattoo on his right arm--a
- premature badge of manhood that also serves as an animist charm
- to ward off evil. Sometimes Kyaw Lin is shaky and feverish
- because, like most of his comrades, he suffers from bouts of
- malaria. Nobody is there to wipe his brow or take his
- temperature; he just lies in his bunker until the fever
- subsides and he can return to fighting the Burmese.
- </p>
- <p> Like the rest of the soldiers of the 101st Battalion in
- Komura, Kyaw Lin is tired. A few weeks earlier, he and other
- men in his squadron waded across the river into Thailand,
- chasing a battalion of Burmese troops that had slipped across
- the border to attack the Karen position from the rear. Karen
- troops battled the Burmese in the Thai village of Wang Kauo;
- by the time the fighting was over, twelve Karens and 70 Burmese
- were dead, and the village was a charred ruin. Kyaw Lin
- remembers stepping over dead bodies, but little else. He likes
- to keep his mind, he says, on the present. That means thinking
- about Komura, about dropping into trenches when the shelling
- starts, and about waiting for his turn at the front line. Kyaw
- Lin has a child's simple interpretation of rotation: "Sometimes
- I go to the front to replace my friends."
- </p>
- <p> The front line is a classic stalemate, with Burmese and
- Karen troops separated by only a 30-yd. killing zone of mines,
- bamboo stakes and barbed wire. Kyaw Lin has been close enough
- to spot the shovels of Burmese soldiers digging deeper trenches
- across the way. Ammunition is scarce, and so the Karens rely
- on mines handcrafted from bamboo and fuse-lighted grenades that
- are no more sophisticated than the ancient British Grenadier
- devices that gave them the name. Sometimes the Karens launch
- the grenades by catapult, stretching thick rubber bands between
- two stakes like a giant slingshot.
- </p>
- <p> Kyaw Lin hangs out with the other kids at Komura, doing
- chores and waiting for the orders of Lieut. Brown, 38, a Karen
- who lost his right leg to a mine ten years ago. His stump is
- covered by an intricate blue swirl of tattoos. Unable to go out
- on patrol, he trains the children and the volunteers from
- nearby villages. Brown insists that the children are not forced
- to fight, and he says he tries to keep them back. But, he
- acknowledges reluctantly, sometimes they do go to war. He adds
- that the children are mostly good fighters, but they are not
- always careful. "When there is shelling," he says, "the younger
- ones forget to take cover. They get too excited. They have to
- be ordered to get down inside the bunkers."
- </p>
- <p> Khi Ha Won, 10, is one of the excitable ones who have to be
- closely watched. He is small, with a sturdy chest and spindly
- legs. In his shorts and faded Mickey Mouse T-shirt, he looks
- as if he has just come from a playground. Khi Ha Won's parents
- live in a Thai refugee camp, but he kept nagging to join the
- soldiers. Eventually they let him. The last time he was rotated
- forward, he could plainly see two Burmese soldiers on the other
- side of the minefield reinforcing their bunkers with mud and
- wood. He lifted his carbine to shoot but was sharply ordered
- to hold his fire. He still seems incredulous about that; the
- hardest lesson for the children to accept is that ammunition
- has to be saved.
- </p>
- <p> He shares his carbine with two others, does not have a
- uniform or even a helmet to show he is a soldier. As if to
- compensate, he proudly wears mottled blue-black swirls on his
- arms and chest--make-believe tattoos. His commander drew them
- with charcoal because no one in camp can wield tattoo needles
- properly. Other kids tease him about trying to act like a
- grownup and joke that he even has a girlfriend. But Khi Ha Won
- shakes his head with shy dignity. "Oh, no, impossible." He
- knows he is too young for that.
- </p>
- <p> Unlike the Afghans, Karens harbor mixed feelings about the
- use of children in war, vacillating between denial and pride.
- They revere childhood enough to try to preserve its innocence.
- A wooden schoolhouse in a village near Manerplaw is a tidy
- outpost of chalkboards, geography maps and tattered textbooks.
- Students wear blue-and-white uniforms and recite their lessons
- in singsong unison. They study math, history, Karen, English
- and even Burmese, and there is no time for indoctrination or
- propaganda. The war is only a few miles away, but little of it
- intrudes into the classroom.
- </p>
- <p> To meet the demand for fresh troops at Komura, the customary
- three-month training course at the Manerplaw headquarters was
- speeded up to five weeks last year. On this soggy summer day,
- more than 100 youths are in training, most of them between ages
- 16 and 18. But more than a dozen are no older than 14. All are
- very raw recruits, children of farmers, sent to the army
- because it is their duty--and also because the army provides
- clothes and two meals a day.
- </p>
- <p> Say Tu insists he is 14, and perhaps he is. But his sweet,
- uncertain face, as well as his dirty undershirt and
- blue-checked sarong, makes him look no older than eight. He
- joined after a Karen officer went to his village on a
- recruiting drive and his parents signed him up. He doesn't have
- a tattoo because, he says, "I'm afraid of needles." He is
- homesick but not so awed by his surroundings that he can't
- dread what lies ahead. "I have to do my military service," he
- says with a miserable smile, "but I'd rather be farming back
- home."
- </p>
- <p> Ehtablay, 13, is there only for a refresher course and R.
- and R. He proudly, ostentatiously skips the new recruits'
- morning routine of calisthenics and rifle training so he can
- help the other soldiers with cooking and camp chores. A veteran
- of three battles, Ehtablay ran away from home to join the army
- when he was twelve. He had never been to school, and says he
- always wanted to be a soldier, just like his father and two
- older brothers. He has only a vague notion of how long the war
- has been going on, guessing "49 years." He acts tough around
- the recruits his own age and rather grandly answers their
- tentative questions about combat. "I got to use my gun," he
- brags. Around adults he sneaks back to being a child; at one
- point he grabs an older soldier from behind in a mock wrestling
- hold that looks exactly like a hug.
- </p>
- <p> Before coming to Manerplaw, Ehtablay had never seen
- television or a movie. He had not even known they existed. At
- Manerplaw he got his first taste of both. As a special Army Day
- treat, the recruits are permitted to watch Rambo III on the VCR
- in the officers' barracks. Ehtablay sits on the floor, hugging
- his knees, and stares, mouth open, eyes bedazzled, at Sylvester
- Stallone's leading Afghan freedom fighters in a charge against
- Soviet tanks.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-