War was classroom for Sierra Leone child soldiers
FREETOWN (Reuters) - Abu is not sure exactly how old he was the first time he killed.
He thinks he was 13, but was high on a cocktail of drugs and alcohol at the time and -- like many Sierra Leoneans -- does not know his exact date of birth.
Kidnapped with around 30 young boys in early 1991 from his home in the village of Kuiva, eastern Sierra Leone, Abu was one of hundreds of children forced to fight with rebels backed by Liberian warlord Charles Taylor.
Taylor, who went on to become president of Liberia, stands trial in The Hague on Monday, facing 11 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity for helping to launch and foment Sierra Leone's 1991-2002 civil war.
Known as "Pappy" to a generation of child soldiers, he is accused of training, financing and arming the rebels who carried out the initial attacks that began the diamond-fuelled conflict.
"People were fleeing from the fighting. They raided the place, they took all the young men. I was about 13," Abu told Reuters in Sierra Leone's capital, Freetown, asking for his family name not to be published.
"First of all they made us carry loads, things that were stolen when they raided. If you did not do it they would kill you. That was the first killing I saw. That made me silent and made me obey orders," he said.
The boys were taken back over the border to the rebel base in Vaihun, Liberia, where they were locked in cells by night and taught to cock and fire AK-47s by day.
They had a week of shooting practice, during which two or three of them were killed by colleagues too small to control their weapons. Then they returned to Sierra Leone to fight.
"You could not cook in the jungle or smoke or the enemy would see you. If you broke that rule they would execute you immediately, right there," Abu said.
Given marijuana and rum to overcome their fear, those who proved poor fighters were used as bait, running into villages unarmed so government troops would open fire on them as the rebels slipped in behind, firing at random.
"You didn't know who the bullets would catch. But I never took someone aside to shoot them," Abu said.
"At that stage we did not know the rebels' name. But later on they started writing RUF all over the houses."
WARRIOR LIFESTYLE
The Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebels became notorious during Sierra Leone's ensuing decade of war for hacking the limbs off their victims; sometimes 'long-sleeve', at the wrist, sometimes 'short-sleeve', at the elbow. Continued...



