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Mother released from Jerusalem court

• Woman accused of child neglect under house arrest
• Tensions eased between ultra-orthodox and police

Calm is expected to return to the streets of Jerusalem today after a court decision attempted to defuse clashes between police and ultra-Orthodox protesters. Violent riots racked the city this week as thousands of ultra-Orthodox – or “Haredi” – residents protested against the arrest of a woman accused of nearly starving her three-year-old son to death.

Yesterday Jerusalem courts released the woman to house arrest.

The violence escalated this week, with 50 arrests and 18 police injuries on Thursday night as protesters threw bottles and rocks at police, who responded with water-cannons.

Extreme sections of Jerusalem’s ultra-Orthodox community were angered by police intervention in the case of a Haredi woman suspected of starving her son over a period of two years. The toddler was hospitalised last week, weighing 7kg. His mother is thought to be suffering from the psychiatric condition Munchausen’s syndrome by proxy, whereby individuals attempt to draw attention to themselves by deliberately making someone else ill, typically a child.

But rumours over religious persecution have reportedly raged through Haredi neighbourhoods and one rabbi described the case as a blood libel.

According to a Jerusalem Post editorial last week, such rumours include claims that the emaciated toddler had cancer, and that doctors were conducting experiments on the child. The article slates these as the “conspiracy theories” of extremists and religious fanatics and reports that the doctor treating the child confirms that he does not have cancer and has gained weight in hospital

The woman, who is five months pregnant and has two other children, will now undergo psychiatric evaluation by a professional approved by social services and the Haredi community.

David Zilbershlag, media representative for the accused, said: “The best outcome of the court’s decision is that it has restored some faith in the system amongst the Orthodox community.”

Members of this community say the Haredi mother’s imprisonment shattered the trust and good relations that had developed with social services, previously viewed with hatred and suspicion by a deeply insular, ultra-conservative sector with rigid codes of conduct.

The Haredi custom of raising large families and abstaining from work on religious grounds results in high levels of poverty, and regularly attracts stigmatisation and accusations of child neglect. Last summer, Israeli media reported that a four-year-old Haredi child was abandoned at Ben Gurion airport while her eight-member family boarded a flight to Paris.

Some commentators have observed that the incident points to a deep malaise in the community. “The stress is immense in those families where there is no money, no work and lots of children,” says Professor Tamar El-Or, who lectures in sociology and anthropology at Jerusalem’s Hebrew university. “Fragile people, like this woman, can collapse. But in this immense effort to protect the community and its ideological beliefs, a story is created about children being kidnapped … and the religious leadership does not take any responsibility for thinking of solutions.”

Before the Jerusalem court hearing, about 2,000 police were on standby in the city, fearing that protests over the Haredi mother might spill over into ongoing clashes about a car park. The new municipal parking lot near the Old City is open on Saturdays, which the ultra-religious view as a desecration of the Sabbath.

This issue has been a regular flashpoint in the city over the past month, with several arrests and charges of police assault.

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Nepal child soldiers being freed

File image of Nepal's Maoist rebels, January 2004

Nepal has begun the process of freeing thousands of child soldiers from camps holding former Maoist rebel fighters.

Officials visited one of the camps in southern Nepal to brief the young people ahead of their planned transfer to rehabilitation programmes.

The release of the child soldiers – estimated at about 3,000 – is a key part of Nepal’s peace process.

The UN welcomed the move as a "significant milestone" for the Himalayan nation.

Maoist rebels ended a 10-year armed insurgency in November 2006, signing a peace deal that brought them into the government.

They won the most votes in elections in 2008, but then left the government earlier this year in a row over their leader’s attempt to fire the army chief.

Training and support

About 24,000 former fighters have been confined to UN-monitored camps since the peace deal was agreed.

Of these, the UN has identified about 3,000 as being under the age of 18, as well as 1,000 as having joined the Maoists after the peace process began.

In a statement, the United Nations mission in Nepal said it welcomed the government’s move to begin the discharge and rehabilitation process for these two groups.

It said it was ready to provide support to the programme, and urged the Maoist leadership to work with the government to ensure it was successfully completed.

A spokesman for Nepal’s Ministry of Peace and Reconstruction said a team had begun meeting young former fighters at one of the camps.

The BBC’s Joanna Jolly, in Nepal, says the young people will be offered a rehabilitation package that includes vocational training and psychological support.

They will also be allowed to stay in specially-built transit camps for up to 45 days before returning home, our correspondent says.

The government says it wants all the child soldiers to be released by the beginning of November.

The question of what to do with the adult fighters – and whether to integrate them into the national army – remains a more difficult question and a key stumbling block in the peace process. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Hermene Hartman: The Good News about Joseph Jackson

One thing’s for sure: I think Joe Jackson is getting a bad rap and not being accurately portrayed. The Jackson story is an all-American success story, with Joe Jackson at the center.

Matthew McConaughey Camila Alves To Marry Winter 2009

INFPhoto.com
Matthew McConaughey will make an honest woman out of Camila Alves later this year.
The Ghosts of Girlfriends Past actor has reportedly agreed to tie the knot with the mother of his son in a ceremony this winter.
A source told The National Enquirer Magazine: “Camila was fine about not being married when they had their first [...]

Laureate backs school vetting scheme

Anthony Browne takes conciliatory line following calls to boycott school visits over police checks

New children’s laureate Anthony Browne has attempted to calm the storm that has blown up among children’s authors over a new scheme requiring them to be vetted before visiting schools.

Philip Pullman described the vetting scheme as “outrageous, demeaning and insulting” to the Guardian on Friday and said he wouldn’t be appearing in schools again because of it, while former children’s laureate Anne Fine said it was “demeaning” and “unhealthy”, also ruling out appearing in UK schools. “It’s a sledgehammer to miss a nut,” she said on Friday.

The Vetting and Barring Scheme is managed by the Independent Safeguarding Authority, which was set up in response to the 2002 Soham murders, committed by former school caretaker Ian Huntley. It kicks off this October, requiring the 11.3m people across the education, care and health industries who work with children to register – for a £64 fee – on a national database.

Authors including Michael Morpurgo, Quentin Blake and Anthony Horowitz have all hit out at the scheme, saying along with Pullman and Fine that it meant they wouldn’t be appearing in schools in the future. “All of us are constantly invited to do tours of schools abroad. If we can no longer enthuse British children about reading then I’m happy to go to more sensible places like Australia, New Zealand, America, France and Italy,” said Fine on Friday.

Pullman, talking on BBC Radio’s Today programme this morning, asked why he “should have to pay £64 to a government agency to be given a certificate saying ‘I’m not a paedophile’. It’s so ludicrous that it’s almost funny, but it’s not funny, it’s actually rather dispiriting and sinister.”

Browne, however, has taken a more sanguine approach to news of the scheme. “I feel that as writers we shouldn’t necessarily be granted an exemption,” he said. “If all people who work with children have to be vetted by the police then we shouldn’t be an exception. It seems a bit odd that we have to pay for it, though.”

Gillian Cross, author of The Demon Headmaster, agreed with Browne, telling the Bookseller that anything that could be done to stop child abuse was worth it. “I understand entirely why people are enraged about the whole child abuse suspicion frenzy, which is particularly hard on men. It is nevertheless true that many children are abused. Theirs is the real suffering, and if checking can help to prevent that, I’m not opposed to it,” Cross said.

And posting on the Bookseller’s website, children’s author Robert Muchamore wrote that accusations that the scheme was “a stealth tax, or part of some Orwellian state apparatus that puts a barrier between children and adults is absurdly over the top”.

“You pay £64, they run a criminal records check and you get a piece of paper to say that you have no prior convictions related to mistreatment of children. It isn’t a cure for child abuse, but it does create a barrier to stop past offenders working with kids. That seems perfectly reasonable to me,” he wrote, adding on Twitter that he was “irritated at another round of whinging by the usual grey-haired mafia of ‘renowned’ kids’ authors”.

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Baby P report: staff need training to spot abuse

Many NHS doctors and nurses are inadequately prepared to spot and act upon signs of child abuse or neglect, a damning report on the aftermath of the Baby P scandal warns.

The detailed survey by the Care Quality Commission exposes a failure inside the health service even among some paediatric specialists and GPs to get to grips with the challenges of safeguarding children.

It says many clinicians have not received up-to-date mandatory training in child protection, while health visitors are overwhelmed by excessive case loads.

The review was ordered after it emerged that NHS staff in Haringey, north London, including some employed by Great Ormond Street children’s hospital, saw Baby Peter, as he is now known, on 35 separate occasions in his short life and, on all but one occasion, failed to realise he was in danger.

Highlighting the inadequate response by health trusts, Cynthia Bower, the commission’s chief executive, said: “Immediately after the Baby P tragedy, everyone agreed that everything possible must be done to prevent a recurrence. This must not prove to be hollow rhetoric. The NHS has got to play its part by getting these safeguarding measures in place.

“It is clear that safeguarding has not been as high on the agenda of trust boards as it should have been … In some cases NHS staff have not been given the support they need in terms of training and clear procedures for handling concerns. If that were to change, it would be an appropriate legacy for Baby Peter.”

The 17-month-old Baby Peter, who had been also monitored by social workers and police, was seen by a consultant paediatrician, Sabah Al-Zayyat, two days before he died in Haringey in early 2007. She had not been not given the full picture of Peter’s history before the examination, although a subsequent internal Great Ormond Street inquiry said she should have identified his injuries as signs of abuse.

After he died, Peter was found to have serious injuries including a broken back and fractured ribs. His mother, her boyfriend and a lodger were later sentenced for causing or allowing the child’s death.

The report says that only 54% of eligible NHS staff have received basic child protection training, a “worryingly low” proportion. According to the inspectors, in 20 of the primary care trusts surveyed, as few as 10% of GPs were up-to-date with what was said to be a “basic” level of training.

On health visitors, the investigation discovered that 29 out of 152 primary care trusts were dealing with caseloads of more than 500 children each, “well above [the] recommendation of 400″.

Among other findings were that only 37% of trusts have a dedicated budget for training staff in child protection issues, while 65% of GPs either do not have appropriate training or there is no data to say whether they do or don’t. Only 58% of A&E or urgent care staff have adequate training in child protection.

Last year about one in 10 GP consultations were with children aged 14 or under; nearly three million children under 16 attend A&E departments ever year.

In 2008-09, the year that the Baby P scandal erupted, more NHS trusts did admit that they could not comply with national core standards – one of which deals with child protection. The numbers declaring compliance fell marginally from nearly 97% to 94% – suggesting a slight increase in self-criticism.

More than one in 10 trusts “did not appear to comply with the statutory requirement to carry out criminal records bureau checks for all staffemployed since 2002,” the report said. “We are particularly concerned with the large proportion of trusts that do not have a process for following up children who miss outpatient appointments.”

Commenting on the findings, Jo Webber, deputy director of policy at the NHS Confederation, said: “Despite the progress many NHS organisations have made, and the commitment of individuals working in the health service, there is clearly much more that can be done to make sure children are protected properly. This means promoting a culture of questioning amongst staff.”

The Liberal Democrat health spokesman, Norman Lamb, said: “It’s disgraceful that some parts of the NHS are still failing to comply with basic child protection requirements like carrying out criminal record checks on staff.”

The health secretary, Andy Burnham, said: “I want trusts and PCTs to use this report to support a coordinated programme of action to assure and sustain essential levels of safeguarding in activities relating to children.”

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Daniel Radcliffe Gay Rumors Provide Lots Of Laughs For “Harry Potter” Star

Daniel Radcliffe loves the fact that people think he’s gay – and regularly gets gay pals to check homosexual-friendly websites to search for gossip about him.
The former child star, who rose to fame as part of the Harry Potter film franchise, believes he is often mistaken for being gay because of his campy personality. [...]

Kidman compiles daughter’s first b’day video for grandparents

Nicole Kidman has compiled a video of her daughter Sunday Rose and sent it to her grandparents so that they can see the tot grow up.
The Aussie actress has settled with her country star husband Keith Urban and their one-year-old daughter in Nashville, Tennessee.
However, Kidman didn”t want the distance between her and the [...]

Kidman compiles daughter’s first b’day video for grandparents

Nicole Kidman has compiled a video of her daughter Sunday Rose and sent it to her grandparents so that they can see the tot grow up.
The Aussie actress has settled with her country star husband Keith Urban and their one-year-old daughter in Nashville, Tennessee.
However, Kidman didn”t want the distance between her and the [...]

Lenore Skenazy: Why The Nice Man Didn’t Save the Toddler

Worse, in a suspicious climate like that – not unlike our own – adults grow wary of any involvement with kids who aren’t theirs.

Karolina Kurkova Pregnant

Credit: Dara Kushner/INFphoto.com
Victoria’s Secret supermodel Karolina Kurkova is pregnant with her first child.
The Czech-born catwalk maven, 25, and her fiancé Archie Drury are expecting a baby tot in October, her rep confirmed Tuesday.
“Supermodel and actress Karolina Kurkova and her fiancé, film producer Archie Drury have announced that they are expecting their first child,” [...]

Charles Taylor claims ‘love for humanity’

Former Liberian leader faces 11 counts, including murder, sexual slavery and using child soldiers in backing Sierra Leone rebels

The former Liberian president Charles Taylor began his defence at his war crimes trial in the Hague today by professing his “love for humanity” and said the charges against him were based on lies and misinformation.

Taylor faces 11 counts before the special court for Sierra Leone, including murder, sexual slavery and the use of child soldiers. Prosecutors have accused Taylor of arming and instructing rebels during the 1991-2002 civil war in Sierra Leone in order to gain control of its rich diamond fields.

In court, Taylor confidently introduced himself to the three judges as the 21st president of Liberia. His defence lawyer, the British QC Courtenay Griffiths, asked Taylor what he thought of an indictment that accused him of being “everything from a terrorist to a rapist”.

“It is quite incredible that such descriptions of me would come about,” Taylor said. “It is very, very, very unfortunate that the prosecution – because of disinformation, misinformation, lies, rumours – would associate me with such titles or descriptions.”

Yesterday Griffiths told the court that Taylor, 61, had been a “broker of peace” in the region rather than a war criminal and would testify about his efforts to restore calm in Sierra Leone.

The description was sharply at odds with the evidence offered by the prosecution since January 2008. The 91 witnesses called included a man whose hands were hacked off by rebels during the war and a former aide of Taylor who said he saw him eat a human liver.

Taylor, who is expected to give several weeks of testimony, insisted he had done no wrong.

“I am a father of 14 children, grandchildren, with love for humanity, have fought all my life to do what I thought was right in the interests of justice and fair play. I resent that characterisation of me. It is false, it is malicious, and I’ll stop there.”

He is the first African leader to be tried by an international court. An economics graduate who once escaped from a US prison, Taylor launched a successful rebellion in Liberia before being elected president in 1997.

He is alleged to have forged close ties to the brutal Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebel movement in neighbouring Sierra Leone, which was notorious for recruiting child soldiers and hacking off the limbs of civilians during a conflict which cost tens of thousands of lives. The prosecutor, Stephen Rapp, said Taylor provided weapons and support to the rebels in return for “blood diamonds”.

Taylor denied encouraging atrocities such as forced amputations by the rebels, and said the allegation that he had been paid in diamonds placed inside food jars was a “diabolical lie”.

“Never, ever, whether it was mayonnaise or coffee or whatever jar of diamonds from the RUF,” he said.

Taylor fled to Nigeria after being indicted in 2003 for war crimes. In March 2006, when Nigeria accepted that he should face international justice, Taylor escaped from his seaside villa and was arrested trying to cross into Cameroon. He was transferred to The Hague, rather the Sierra Leone capital, Freetown, where the special court is based, due to fears that the trial might affect regional stability.

A verdict is expected next year.

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Marian Wright Edelman: Let’s Stop Playing the Lottery with Our Children’s Health

As Congress drafts legislation to reform America’s health care system, our Senators and Representatives must consider the impact of the unjust lottery of geography on…

Unending agony for Liberia’s soldiers

Tomorrow Charles Taylor becomes the first African leader to appear in the dock at The Hague accused of crimes against humanity. In the bullet-scarred region of Lofa, in northern Liberia, Annie Kelly meets his former child soldiers, who were first traumatised by war, then abandoned by the state – and have now been cast out by their own families

Gloria Sherman was 13 years old when Charles Taylor’s soldiers came for her in 2001. Flushed from her hiding place in the bush outside her village in Lofa, northern Liberia, she was forced to watch as her father and brother were skinned alive. Then she was taken into a captivity lasting nearly two years: a conscript child soldier and a sexual slave in the former president’s army.

She is 18 now, but the memories are still raw. “We used to do bad, bad things that they told us to do,” she said last week. “Sometimes even if you were only 10 years old they would put guns and ammunition on your head to carry to the battle; you have to do what they said or they’d kill you. They killed many children, many girls. All the time many soldiers would have sex with you, every night they would come and have sex and beat you, and if you said no they would kill you or hit you with guns.”

Tomorrow Taylor will become the first African leader to be tried for crimes against humanity by the Special Court for Sierra Leone, sitting in The Hague. He faces 11 charges – including the deployment of child soldiers – relating to a decade-long civil war in the neighbouring state of Sierra Leone.

But it was in Liberia, as a rebel leader and then as president, that his juvenile bands of killers first began to roam in the 1990s, a military model that was then exported across the border.

Across the towns and villages of the north, countless atrocities took place and thousands of young lives were irredeemably brutalised. Nobody who managed to survive them has forgotten the days when Taylor was the power in the land.

During and after Taylor’s successful rebellion against the corrupt and violent government of Samuel Doe, his National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL) army controlled much of the country. The Small Boys Unit, made up of children under 11, was among his most feared rebel battalions, a regiment of innocent murderers.

When the rebel warlord was eventually elected president in 1997, one of his election campaign slogans was: “He killed my ma, he killed my pa, but I will vote for him.”

The Taylor presidency was savagely violent as constant insurgencies locked the country in a cycle of war until he was forced to resign in 2003. His son, the infamous Chucky Taylor, who ran Taylor’s paramilitary anti-terrorism security forces, was jailed by a US court for 97 years this year after it was found that, between 1999 and 2002, his “Demon Forces” squads had tortured to death scores of people accused of being anti-Taylor rebels.

By 2003, as Taylor lost control of large tracts of the country to the equally ruthless Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (Lurd) rebel force, backed by Guinea, some 15,000 children were fighting in Taylor’s government forces.

Defeated at last, Taylor resigned, went into exile in Nigeria and now faces life imprisonment if found guilty at The Hague. Meanwhile the children and adolescents who killed and suffered in his name have grown into a traumatised, desolate adulthood.

In Lofa county, where the child soldiers once rampaged, bullet-scarred buildings and burnt-out checkpoints still stand as monuments to the relentless fighting this province endured.

Rebel activity and government raids forced hundreds of thousands of civilians in Lofa to flee their homes and surge over the borders of Guinea and Sierra Leone, where they filled sprawling refugee camps until the peace in 2003. When they came back, they found Lofa in tatters, its infrastructure destroyed and villages burnt. Although the region is now peaceful and the land is once again lush, the scars of the war are everywhere.

Many villages in the region are little more than temporary shelters dotted with shattered buildings and burnt-out churches. Rows of tanks sit behind barbed wire as bored Bangladeshi peacekeeping soldiers sit fingering their rifles at lookout posts in United Nations encampments scattered throughout the area.

The vast majority of people here have no electricity and struggle to scrape a living from the land. As for the thousands of former child combatants who returned here after the war, they are now obliged to endure new horrors as they try to rebuild their lives.

Two years of systematic rape and beatings have left Gloria with jagged scars and internal injuries so severe that she has little chance of ever becoming a mother. When she managed to escape from her captors and make her way back to her village, she found that she was now an outcast.

Labelled a “rebel wife” and accused of collaborating in the violence inflicted on her village by drugged and ruthless soldiers during the war, she says that the only way she can survive is by having sex with men – NGO workers, government officials and businessmen – who often pay her in food, sanitary towels or soap.

“They say we are bad girls because of what we did in the war and what we do now,” Gloria said. “But they took me and I had no choice.”

The Observer talked to dozens of Taylor’s former child soldiers in Lofa who said that they have been abandoned by the state, ostracised by their families and forced into prostitution and crime in order to survive.

Elijah Kollie, a frail 19-year-old taken from his home by Taylor’s government troops in 2000, talked impassively of children’s stomachs being slit open in front of him and of the multiple rapes and murders he witnessed on the front line. “When I came back, I didn’t have anyone: everyone in my family was dead,” he said with a shrug.

He points to a patch of earth in the centre of the village where he said that Lurd rebels used to boil alive people they suspected of aiding Taylor’s government forces. “I still don’t know where to go because I can’t forget what happened. I feel angry because of what happened to me and now people here are causing many problems for us. I just wish my father was still here.”

A recent report by Plan, a leading international children’s organisation, said that the phenomenon of child soldier armies in conflicts across west Africa has left a devastating footprint of psychological trauma and spiralling suicide rates across the region.

Interviews conducted with child soldiers across Liberia for the report revealed that 60% of them had witnessed another child being beaten to death, 87% had seen a family member killed and 84% had found themselves “surrounded by, lying underneath or stepping on” dead bodies.

In Sierra Leone, Plan researchers deemed 70% of girls and 80% of boys interviewed for the report were at serious risk of suicide, with 30% of children interviewed having already attempted suicide on at least one occasion.

“The war broke the bonds between children and their parents and extended families. Those who fought as soldiers are now treated as pariahs and this stigma goes all the way up the chain from village level up to local and central government,” said Joseph Henah, a counsellor at one of Plan’s child soldier support programmes in Lofa.

“The situation that is faced by many of these children is desperate. The majority, if not all, of the girls are forced into transactional sex. Many are living alone, they are on drugs, they cannot go to school and this is the generation which is supposed to be leading our country out of poverty and into a better future.”

Child rights groups say that the plight of Liberia’s former child soldiers is going unheeded as the government struggles to provide even basic services to its 3.5 million people, 2.4 million of whom are surviving on less than $1 a day. As one of the world’s poorest countries – with only 50 government doctors and the eighth highest global maternal mortality rate – Liberia has no money to spend on the casualties of its shocking recent history.

When asked about why the government is failing to help former child soldiers, Dr Wilhemina Jallah of the John F Kennedy Memorial Hospital in the capital, Monrovia, points to the hundreds of women waiting for treatment in the hospital’s steamy outpatient clinic. “The majority of women who come in to give birth have malaria, many have terrible injuries which makes childbirth dangerous, there is no transport to health centres in rural areas and we don’t have enough drugs,” she said. “Although they are needed, mental health services are not our priority.”

Many fear the country’s fragile peace now hangs in the balance after Liberia’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission released its final report last week, recommending that the current president, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, and other key political figures face sanctions for their role in the civil war.

The report recommended that the popular Johnson-Sirleaf be banned from holding public office for 30 years for her role in financing Taylor’s invasion in 1989. Testifying before the commission earlier this year, Johnson-Sirleaf apologised for her support of Taylor, saying that she had been “fooled” into it.

“If there is anything that I need to apologise for to this nation, it is to apologise for being fooled by Mr Taylor in giving any kind of support to him,” the president told the commission. “I feel it in my conscience. I feel it every day.”

The commission, which was launched by Johnson-Sirleaf herself after she was elected in 2005, heard testimonies from thousands of victims in an effort to move the country towards reconciliation before launching its final report. Several of the former warlords who are recommended for prosecution by the commission, many of whom now hold public office, have already pledged to oppose any attempt to bring them to justice, sparking fears of a return to violence.

In Monrovia, many Liberians say their desire for peace outweighs their need for justice. “We just want to forget the war and move on; we don’t want a return to violence: we want peace and jobs,” said Charles Muyan, who drives a taxi downtown. “We don’t want this whole thing brought up again.”

But in Lofa, hundreds of miles away, there is no indication that life will get any better for the thousands of former child soldiers struggling to survive. “I think about my father and my brother every day and my sister who I haven’t seen since she was taken by rebels,” said Gloria. “When I close my eyes, all I can see is the war. I often think about taking my own life. It would have been better if I’d died in the war, but I am still alive and I hope one day something will be different and I will be a good person.”

The burden of being a “rebel child” has proved too much for some. Two months ago, Mardy Samuka’s body was found swinging from the roof of the bullet-scarred church near the village of Foya in Lofa – another, belated victim of Taylor’s terrifying reign.

Samuka’s aunt, Moidee, wept as she talked of the desperation her nephew felt. Crippled when a stray bullet lodged in his leg during fighting around the village in 2001, it was what happened to him after the war that drove the 19-year-old to put the noose around his neck, she said.

“I tell people that he was never a soldier, that he never did any of those terrible things that the children did to this village, but any child missing a limb is known as a former soldier here,” she said.

“He carried that stigma, we all did; his life could come to nothing. There was nobody to help him.”

• Some of the names in this article have been changed to protect identities

Life and times of Charles Taylor

1948 Born Charles McArthur Ghankay Taylor to a Gola mother and American-Liberian father in Arthington, Liberia.

1972 Awarded degree at Bentley college, Massachusetts.

1980 Supports coup led by Samuel K Doe and given high-ranking position in Liberian government.

1983 Faces charges of embezzling $922,000 and flees Liberia.

1984 Arrested on the run in Massachusetts and jailed.

1985 Rumoured to have sawed through prison bars to escape a US jail before leaving for Libya.

1989 Launches rebellion against Doe.

1990 Doe overthrown after months of fighting.

1991 Revolutionary United Front rebellion starts in Sierra Leone, allegedly backed by Taylor.

1995 Liberian factions sign peace deal

1997 Taylor elected president in landslide.

1999 Start of anti-Taylor rebellion by Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (Lurd).

2003 Special Court for Sierra Leone charges Taylor with crimes against humanity as Lurd takes control of most of the country.

2003 Taylor resigns and goes into exile in Nigeria.

2006 Taylor arrested in Nigeria and handed to the UN in Sierra Leone. The prosecution asks for the trial to be switched to The Hague.

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Unending agony for Liberia’s soldiers

Tomorrow Charles Taylor becomes the first African leader to appear in the dock at The Hague accused of crimes against humanity. In the bullet-scarred region of Lofa, in northern Liberia, Annie Kelly meets his former child soldiers, who were first traumatised by war, then abandoned by the state – and have now been cast out by their own families

Gloria Sherman was 13 years old when Charles Taylor’s soldiers came for her in 2001. Flushed from her hiding place in the bush outside her village in Lofa, northern Liberia, she was forced to watch as her father and brother were skinned alive. Then she was taken into a captivity lasting nearly two years: a conscript child soldier and a sexual slave in the former president’s army.

She is 18 now, but the memories are still raw. “We used to do bad, bad things that they told us to do,” she said last week. “Sometimes even if you were only 10 years old they would put guns and ammunition on your head to carry to the battle; you have to do what they said or they’d kill you. They killed many children, many girls. All the time many soldiers would have sex with you, every night they would come and have sex and beat you, and if you said no they would kill you or hit you with guns.”

Tomorrow Taylor will become the first African leader to be tried for crimes against humanity by the Special Court for Sierra Leone, sitting in The Hague. He faces 11 charges – including the deployment of child soldiers – relating to a decade-long civil war in the neighbouring state of Sierra Leone.

But it was in Liberia, as a rebel leader and then as president, that his juvenile bands of killers first began to roam in the 1990s, a military model that was then exported across the border.

Across the towns and villages of the north, countless atrocities took place and thousands of young lives were irredeemably brutalised. Nobody who managed to survive them has forgotten the days when Taylor was the power in the land.

During and after Taylor’s successful rebellion against the corrupt and violent government of Samuel Doe, his National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL) army controlled much of the country. The Small Boys Unit, made up of children under 11, was among his most feared rebel battalions, a regiment of innocent murderers.

When the rebel warlord was eventually elected president in 1997, one of his election campaign slogans was: “He killed my ma, he killed my pa, but I will vote for him.”

The Taylor presidency was savagely violent as constant insurgencies locked the country in a cycle of war until he was forced to resign in 2003. His son, the infamous Chucky Taylor, who ran Taylor’s paramilitary anti-terrorism security forces, was jailed by a US court for 97 years this year after it was found that, between 1999 and 2002, his “Demon Forces” squads had tortured to death scores of people accused of being anti-Taylor rebels.

By 2003, as Taylor lost control of large tracts of the country to the equally ruthless Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (Lurd) rebel force, backed by Guinea, some 15,000 children were fighting in Taylor’s government forces.

Defeated at last, Taylor resigned, went into exile in Nigeria and now faces life imprisonment if found guilty at The Hague. Meanwhile the children and adolescents who killed and suffered in his name have grown into a traumatised, desolate adulthood.

In Lofa county, where the child soldiers once rampaged, bullet-scarred buildings and burnt-out checkpoints still stand as monuments to the relentless fighting this province endured.

Rebel activity and government raids forced hundreds of thousands of civilians in Lofa to flee their homes and surge over the borders of Guinea and Sierra Leone, where they filled sprawling refugee camps until the peace in 2003. When they came back, they found Lofa in tatters, its infrastructure destroyed and villages burnt. Although the region is now peaceful and the land is once again lush, the scars of the war are everywhere.

Many villages in the region are little more than temporary shelters dotted with shattered buildings and burnt-out churches. Rows of tanks sit behind barbed wire as bored Bangladeshi peacekeeping soldiers sit fingering their rifles at lookout posts in United Nations encampments scattered throughout the area.

The vast majority of people here have no electricity and struggle to scrape a living from the land. As for the thousands of former child combatants who returned here after the war, they are now obliged to endure new horrors as they try to rebuild their lives.

Two years of systematic rape and beatings have left Gloria with jagged scars and internal injuries so severe that she has little chance of ever becoming a mother. When she managed to escape from her captors and make her way back to her village, she found that she was now an outcast.

Labelled a “rebel wife” and accused of collaborating in the violence inflicted on her village by drugged and ruthless soldiers during the war, she says that the only way she can survive is by having sex with men – NGO workers, government officials and businessmen – who often pay her in food, sanitary towels or soap.

“They say we are bad girls because of what we did in the war and what we do now,” Gloria said. “But they took me and I had no choice.”

The Observer talked to dozens of Taylor’s former child soldiers in Lofa who said that they have been abandoned by the state, ostracised by their families and forced into prostitution and crime in order to survive.

Elijah Kollie, a frail 19-year-old taken from his home by Taylor’s government troops in 2000, talked impassively of children’s stomachs being slit open in front of him and of the multiple rapes and murders he witnessed on the front line. “When I came back, I didn’t have anyone: everyone in my family was dead,” he said with a shrug.

He points to a patch of earth in the centre of the village where he said that Lurd rebels used to boil alive people they suspected of aiding Taylor’s government forces. “I still don’t know where to go because I can’t forget what happened. I feel angry because of what happened to me and now people here are causing many problems for us. I just wish my father was still here.”

A recent report by Plan, a leading international children’s organisation, said that the phenomenon of child soldier armies in conflicts across west Africa has left a devastating footprint of psychological trauma and spiralling suicide rates across the region.

Interviews conducted with child soldiers across Liberia for the report revealed that 60% of them had witnessed another child being beaten to death, 87% had seen a family member killed and 84% had found themselves “surrounded by, lying underneath or stepping on” dead bodies.

In Sierra Leone, Plan researchers deemed 70% of girls and 80% of boys interviewed for the report were at serious risk of suicide, with 30% of children interviewed having already attempted suicide on at least one occasion.

“The war broke the bonds between children and their parents and extended families. Those who fought as soldiers are now treated as pariahs and this stigma goes all the way up the chain from village level up to local and central government,” said Joseph Henah, a counsellor at one of Plan’s child soldier support programmes in Lofa.

“The situation that is faced by many of these children is desperate. The majority, if not all, of the girls are forced into transactional sex. Many are living alone, they are on drugs, they cannot go to school and this is the generation which is supposed to be leading our country out of poverty and into a better future.”

Child rights groups say that the plight of Liberia’s former child soldiers is going unheeded as the government struggles to provide even basic services to its 3.5 million people, 2.4 million of whom are surviving on less than $1 a day. As one of the world’s poorest countries – with only 50 government doctors and the eighth highest global maternal mortality rate – Liberia has no money to spend on the casualties of its shocking recent history.

When asked about why the government is failing to help former child soldiers, Dr Wilhemina Jallah of the John F Kennedy Memorial Hospital in the capital, Monrovia, points to the hundreds of women waiting for treatment in the hospital’s steamy outpatient clinic. “The majority of women who come in to give birth have malaria, many have terrible injuries which makes childbirth dangerous, there is no transport to health centres in rural areas and we don’t have enough drugs,” she said. “Although they are needed, mental health services are not our priority.”

Many fear the country’s fragile peace now hangs in the balance after Liberia’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission released its final report last week, recommending that the current president, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, and other key political figures face sanctions for their role in the civil war.

The report recommended that the popular Johnson-Sirleaf be banned from holding public office for 30 years for her role in financing Taylor’s invasion in 1989. Testifying before the commission earlier this year, Johnson-Sirleaf apologised for her support of Taylor, saying that she had been “fooled” into it.

“If there is anything that I need to apologise for to this nation, it is to apologise for being fooled by Mr Taylor in giving any kind of support to him,” the president told the commission. “I feel it in my conscience. I feel it every day.”

The commission, which was launched by Johnson-Sirleaf herself after she was elected in 2005, heard testimonies from thousands of victims in an effort to move the country towards reconciliation before launching its final report. Several of the former warlords who are recommended for prosecution by the commission, many of whom now hold public office, have already pledged to oppose any attempt to bring them to justice, sparking fears of a return to violence.

In Monrovia, many Liberians say their desire for peace outweighs their need for justice. “We just want to forget the war and move on; we don’t want a return to violence: we want peace and jobs,” said Charles Muyan, who drives a taxi downtown. “We don’t want this whole thing brought up again.”

But in Lofa, hundreds of miles away, there is no indication that life will get any better for the thousands of former child soldiers struggling to survive. “I think about my father and my brother every day and my sister who I haven’t seen since she was taken by rebels,” said Gloria. “When I close my eyes, all I can see is the war. I often think about taking my own life. It would have been better if I’d died in the war, but I am still alive and I hope one day something will be different and I will be a good person.”

The burden of being a “rebel child” has proved too much for some. Two months ago, Mardy Samuka’s body was found swinging from the roof of the bullet-scarred church near the village of Foya in Lofa – another, belated victim of Taylor’s terrifying reign.

Samuka’s aunt, Moidee, wept as she talked of the desperation her nephew felt. Crippled when a stray bullet lodged in his leg during fighting around the village in 2001, it was what happened to him after the war that drove the 19-year-old to put the noose around his neck, she said.

“I tell people that he was never a soldier, that he never did any of those terrible things that the children did to this village, but any child missing a limb is known as a former soldier here,” she said.

“He carried that stigma, we all did; his life could come to nothing. There was nobody to help him.”

• Some of the names in this article have been changed to protect identities

Life and times of Charles Taylor

1948 Born Charles McArthur Ghankay Taylor to a Gola mother and American-Liberian father in Arthington, Liberia.

1972 Awarded degree at Bentley college, Massachusetts.

1980 Supports coup led by Samuel K Doe and given high-ranking position in Liberian government.

1983 Faces charges of embezzling $922,000 and flees Liberia.

1984 Arrested on the run in Massachusetts and jailed.

1985 Rumoured to have sawed through prison bars to escape a US jail before leaving for Libya.

1989 Launches rebellion against Doe.

1990 Doe overthrown after months of fighting.

1991 Revolutionary United Front rebellion starts in Sierra Leone, allegedly backed by Taylor.

1995 Liberian factions sign peace deal

1997 Taylor elected president in landslide.

1999 Start of anti-Taylor rebellion by Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (Lurd).

2003 Special Court for Sierra Leone charges Taylor with crimes against humanity as Lurd takes control of most of the country.

2003 Taylor resigns and goes into exile in Nigeria.

2006 Taylor arrested in Nigeria and handed to the UN in Sierra Leone. The prosecution asks for the trial to be switched to The Hague.

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Unending agony for Liberia’s soldiers

Tomorrow Charles Taylor becomes the first African leader to appear in the dock at The Hague accused of crimes against humanity. In the bullet-scarred region of Lofa, in northern Liberia, Annie Kelly meets his former child soldiers, who were first traumatised by war, then abandoned by the state – and have now been cast out by their own families

Gloria Sherman was 13 years old when Charles Taylor’s soldiers came for her in 2001. Flushed from her hiding place in the bush outside her village in Lofa, northern Liberia, she was forced to watch as her father and brother were skinned alive. Then she was taken into a captivity lasting nearly two years: a conscript child soldier and a sexual slave in the former president’s army.

She is 18 now, but the memories are still raw. “We used to do bad, bad things that they told us to do,” she said last week. “Sometimes even if you were only 10 years old they would put guns and ammunition on your head to carry to the battle; you have to do what they said or they’d kill you. They killed many children, many girls. All the time many soldiers would have sex with you, every night they would come and have sex and beat you, and if you said no they would kill you or hit you with guns.”

Tomorrow Taylor will become the first African leader to be tried for crimes against humanity by the Special Court for Sierra Leone, sitting in The Hague. He faces 11 charges – including the deployment of child soldiers – relating to a decade-long civil war in the neighbouring state of Sierra Leone.

But it was in Liberia, as a rebel leader and then as president, that his juvenile bands of killers first began to roam in the 1990s, a military model that was then exported across the border.

Across the towns and villages of the north, countless atrocities took place and thousands of young lives were irredeemably brutalised. Nobody who managed to survive them has forgotten the days when Taylor was the power in the land.

During and after Taylor’s successful rebellion against the corrupt and violent government of Samuel Doe, his National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL) army controlled much of the country. The Small Boys Unit, made up of children under 11, was among his most feared rebel battalions, a regiment of innocent murderers.

When the rebel warlord was eventually elected president in 1997, one of his election campaign slogans was: “He killed my ma, he killed my pa, but I will vote for him.”

The Taylor presidency was savagely violent as constant insurgencies locked the country in a cycle of war until he was forced to resign in 2003. His son, the infamous Chucky Taylor, who ran Taylor’s paramilitary anti-terrorism security forces, was jailed by a US court for 97 years this year after it was found that, between 1999 and 2002, his “Demon Forces” squads had tortured to death scores of people accused of being anti-Taylor rebels.

By 2003, as Taylor lost control of large tracts of the country to the equally ruthless Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (Lurd) rebel force, backed by Guinea, some 15,000 children were fighting in Taylor’s government forces.

Defeated at last, Taylor resigned, went into exile in Nigeria and now faces life imprisonment if found guilty at The Hague. Meanwhile the children and adolescents who killed and suffered in his name have grown into a traumatised, desolate adulthood.

In Lofa county, where the child soldiers once rampaged, bullet-scarred buildings and burnt-out checkpoints still stand as monuments to the relentless fighting this province endured.

Rebel activity and government raids forced hundreds of thousands of civilians in Lofa to flee their homes and surge over the borders of Guinea and Sierra Leone, where they filled sprawling refugee camps until the peace in 2003. When they came back, they found Lofa in tatters, its infrastructure destroyed and villages burnt. Although the region is now peaceful and the land is once again lush, the scars of the war are everywhere.

Many villages in the region are little more than temporary shelters dotted with shattered buildings and burnt-out churches. Rows of tanks sit behind barbed wire as bored Bangladeshi peacekeeping soldiers sit fingering their rifles at lookout posts in United Nations encampments scattered throughout the area.

The vast majority of people here have no electricity and struggle to scrape a living from the land. As for the thousands of former child combatants who returned here after the war, they are now obliged to endure new horrors as they try to rebuild their lives.

Two years of systematic rape and beatings have left Gloria with jagged scars and internal injuries so severe that she has little chance of ever becoming a mother. When she managed to escape from her captors and make her way back to her village, she found that she was now an outcast.

Labelled a “rebel wife” and accused of collaborating in the violence inflicted on her village by drugged and ruthless soldiers during the war, she says that the only way she can survive is by having sex with men – NGO workers, government officials and businessmen – who often pay her in food, sanitary towels or soap.

“They say we are bad girls because of what we did in the war and what we do now,” Gloria said. “But they took me and I had no choice.”

The Observer talked to dozens of Taylor’s former child soldiers in Lofa who said that they have been abandoned by the state, ostracised by their families and forced into prostitution and crime in order to survive.

Elijah Kollie, a frail 19-year-old taken from his home by Taylor’s government troops in 2000, talked impassively of children’s stomachs being slit open in front of him and of the multiple rapes and murders he witnessed on the front line. “When I came back, I didn’t have anyone: everyone in my family was dead,” he said with a shrug.

He points to a patch of earth in the centre of the village where he said that Lurd rebels used to boil alive people they suspected of aiding Taylor’s government forces. “I still don’t know where to go because I can’t forget what happened. I feel angry because of what happened to me and now people here are causing many problems for us. I just wish my father was still here.”

A recent report by Plan, a leading international children’s organisation, said that the phenomenon of child soldier armies in conflicts across west Africa has left a devastating footprint of psychological trauma and spiralling suicide rates across the region.

Interviews conducted with child soldiers across Liberia for the report revealed that 60% of them had witnessed another child being beaten to death, 87% had seen a family member killed and 84% had found themselves “surrounded by, lying underneath or stepping on” dead bodies.

In Sierra Leone, Plan researchers deemed 70% of girls and 80% of boys interviewed for the report were at serious risk of suicide, with 30% of children interviewed having already attempted suicide on at least one occasion.

“The war broke the bonds between children and their parents and extended families. Those who fought as soldiers are now treated as pariahs and this stigma goes all the way up the chain from village level up to local and central government,” said Joseph Henah, a counsellor at one of Plan’s child soldier support programmes in Lofa.

“The situation that is faced by many of these children is desperate. The majority, if not all, of the girls are forced into transactional sex. Many are living alone, they are on drugs, they cannot go to school and this is the generation which is supposed to be leading our country out of poverty and into a better future.”

Child rights groups say that the plight of Liberia’s former child soldiers is going unheeded as the government struggles to provide even basic services to its 3.5 million people, 2.4 million of whom are surviving on less than $1 a day. As one of the world’s poorest countries – with only 50 government doctors and the eighth highest global maternal mortality rate – Liberia has no money to spend on the casualties of its shocking recent history.

When asked about why the government is failing to help former child soldiers, Dr Wilhemina Jallah of the John F Kennedy Memorial Hospital in the capital, Monrovia, points to the hundreds of women waiting for treatment in the hospital’s steamy outpatient clinic. “The majority of women who come in to give birth have malaria, many have terrible injuries which makes childbirth dangerous, there is no transport to health centres in rural areas and we don’t have enough drugs,” she said. “Although they are needed, mental health services are not our priority.”

Many fear the country’s fragile peace now hangs in the balance after Liberia’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission released its final report last week, recommending that the current president, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, and other key political figures face sanctions for their role in the civil war.

The report recommended that the popular Johnson-Sirleaf be banned from holding public office for 30 years for her role in financing Taylor’s invasion in 1989. Testifying before the commission earlier this year, Johnson-Sirleaf apologised for her support of Taylor, saying that she had been “fooled” into it.

“If there is anything that I need to apologise for to this nation, it is to apologise for being fooled by Mr Taylor in giving any kind of support to him,” the president told the commission. “I feel it in my conscience. I feel it every day.”

The commission, which was launched by Johnson-Sirleaf herself after she was elected in 2005, heard testimonies from thousands of victims in an effort to move the country towards reconciliation before launching its final report. Several of the former warlords who are recommended for prosecution by the commission, many of whom now hold public office, have already pledged to oppose any attempt to bring them to justice, sparking fears of a return to violence.

In Monrovia, many Liberians say their desire for peace outweighs their need for justice. “We just want to forget the war and move on; we don’t want a return to violence: we want peace and jobs,” said Charles Muyan, who drives a taxi downtown. “We don’t want this whole thing brought up again.”

But in Lofa, hundreds of miles away, there is no indication that life will get any better for the thousands of former child soldiers struggling to survive. “I think about my father and my brother every day and my sister who I haven’t seen since she was taken by rebels,” said Gloria. “When I close my eyes, all I can see is the war. I often think about taking my own life. It would have been better if I’d died in the war, but I am still alive and I hope one day something will be different and I will be a good person.”

The burden of being a “rebel child” has proved too much for some. Two months ago, Mardy Samuka’s body was found swinging from the roof of the bullet-scarred church near the village of Foya in Lofa – another, belated victim of Taylor’s terrifying reign.

Samuka’s aunt, Moidee, wept as she talked of the desperation her nephew felt. Crippled when a stray bullet lodged in his leg during fighting around the village in 2001, it was what happened to him after the war that drove the 19-year-old to put the noose around his neck, she said.

“I tell people that he was never a soldier, that he never did any of those terrible things that the children did to this village, but any child missing a limb is known as a former soldier here,” she said.

“He carried that stigma, we all did; his life could come to nothing. There was nobody to help him.”

• Some of the names in this article have been changed to protect identities

Life and times of Charles Taylor

1948 Born Charles McArthur Ghankay Taylor to a Gola mother and American-Liberian father in Arthington, Liberia.

1972 Awarded degree at Bentley college, Massachusetts.

1980 Supports coup led by Samuel K Doe and given high-ranking position in Liberian government.

1983 Faces charges of embezzling $922,000 and flees Liberia.

1984 Arrested on the run in Massachusetts and jailed.

1985 Rumoured to have sawed through prison bars to escape a US jail before leaving for Libya.

1989 Launches rebellion against Doe.

1990 Doe overthrown after months of fighting.

1991 Revolutionary United Front rebellion starts in Sierra Leone, allegedly backed by Taylor.

1995 Liberian factions sign peace deal

1997 Taylor elected president in landslide.

1999 Start of anti-Taylor rebellion by Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (Lurd).

2003 Special Court for Sierra Leone charges Taylor with crimes against humanity as Lurd takes control of most of the country.

2003 Taylor resigns and goes into exile in Nigeria.

2006 Taylor arrested in Nigeria and handed to the UN in Sierra Leone. The prosecution asks for the trial to be switched to The Hague.

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Authors revolt against school checks

Philip Pullman condemns ‘outrageous, demeaning’ scheme, and says it will stop him going into schools

Philip Pullman has led a chorus of protest from prominent children’s authors over a new scheme that will require them to be vetted before they can visit schools. He called the plans “outrageous, demeaning and insulting” and said he wouldn’t be appearing in schools again because of it.

Set up in response to the murders of Jessica Chapman and Holly Wells by school caretaker Ian Huntley in 2002, the Independent Safeguarding Authority will vet all individuals who work with children from October this year, requiring them to register with a national database for a fee of £64. Pullman compared the scheme to the notorious piece of legislation section 28, which banned the “promotion” of homosexuality in schools and for which David Cameron offered a public apology last week.

“It seems to be fuelled by the same combination of prurience, sexual fear and cold political calculation,” the author of the bestselling His Dark Materials trilogy said today. “When you go into a school as an author or an illustrator you talk to a class at a time or else to the whole school. How on earth – how on earth – how in the world is anybody going to rape or assault a child in those circumstances? It’s preposterous.”

The Carnegie medal-winning author and screenwriter Frank Cottrell Boyce agreed with Pullman. “As an author you’re never alone with a class,” he said. “There’s no possible reason for this, unless it’s a revenue-raising scam.”

Both Pullman and former children’s laureate Anne Fine said the legislation would mean that they would not speak in a school again. “I refuse – having spoken in schools without incident for 32 years, I refuse to undergo such a demeaning process,” said Fine. “It’s all part of a very unhealthy situation that we’ve got ourselves into where all people who are close to children are almost seen as potential paedophiles.”

“If someone says we won’t have you in our school, of course I’m not going to,” agreed Pullman. “It’d be a great shame for me but I’m not going to under these circumstances. I went into a primary school in Oxford earlier this year and thoroughly enjoyed it. It’s a very enjoyable thing I can do occasionally – I don’t have to do it very often because fortunately I can earn enough from my writing. But other authors depend on the income it brings in. For them the crowning insult is to have to pay to clear their name from something they haven’t done.” He believes the legislation will also have a longer-term effect. “It damages in a much deeper way the trust and social cohesion we ought to be able to rely on,” he said. “You ought to be able to trust people, so to say to a child that you’re having someone to talk to you but don’t worry, we’ve checked him out and he’s not a paedophile, implies that everybody who isn’t checked is.”

Children’s author Adele Geras called the scheme “lunatic”. “They ought to be able to refine this legislation to make exceptions for people who see huge groups together,” she said. “One is never alone with a single child – one is never alone with a vast number of children. The smallest number would be 32, and there are always two to three teachers.”

But Geras said she would be prepared to register and pay the £64 in order to continue speaking in schools. “I would love to take a principled stand but I enjoy doing it,” she said. “And there are an awful lot of people who’ll feel more strongly that I do who can’t afford to take a principled stand because school visits will be the bread and butter of their work.” She suggested that the money being spent on establishing the scheme should instead be used to buy some more books for schools.

A statement from the Home Office confirmed that the ISA scheme would apply to authors visiting schools, but made no comment on the authors’ concerns.

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Where to go wilder in Britain

Scotland and Dartmoor are the only places to legally wild camp in Britain. But there are a few sites that offer a more rugged camping experience. Dixe Wills picks the best.

Find more unusual campsites in tomorrow’s Guardian Travel

Ah, the call of the wild. Unzipping your tent in the morning to discover you weren’t dreaming – you really are camped beside some tranquil mountainside tarn, or in a clearing in a mighty forest, or on a cliff top high above a sparkling sea. With a proper hot summer still on the cards, what could gladden the heart more than getting out into the British countryside with a tent and soaking it all up?

Except, of course, it’s not as simple as that. The enlightened Scots, who have long enjoyed a relaxed attitude to land access, have made wild camping legal more or less anywhere (with a few sensible caveats) since 2003. In the rest of Britain, however, the practice is only officially sanctioned in one area – a section of Dartmoor.

The good news is that there’s now a growing number of campsites south of the border that have begun to offer campers the chance to savour the joys of off-piste camping. Where these sites differ from the norm is that rather than providing beautifully tended croquet-flat lawns, electric hook-ups and hardstanding, they offer chunks of topography just as nature crafted it, open fires on which to incinerate your marshmallows and, typically, a compost loo for those campers who feel no compunction to imitate what bears do in the woods. It may not be wild camping in its purest form but it’s a darn good imitation.

Wales leads the way in wilder campsites, with southern England hot on their heels. The phenomenon, it seems, is yet to catch on in the north of England.

Here’s a selection of the best sites where you can go wild in the country.

Gwalia Farm, Cemaes, Machynlleth, Powys

A large area around a lake is given over to camping at Gwalia, an organic farm that enjoys some quite breathtaking views of Snowdonia. Closer at hand, there are wild orchids, buzzards, kites, nightjars, glow worms, and all manner of aquatic life to look out for, including an otter. Drinking and washing water comes from a natural spring, there are earth loos in the woods and, should you wish to wander, the farm is on the Cambrian Way, Glyndwr’s Way and the Dyfi Valley Way.

• Gwalia Farm. Adult £4, child £2; +44 (0)1650 511377.

Graig Wen Arthog, nr Dolgellau, Gwynedd

Graig Wen admits to playing host to a conventional campsite but, for four weeks a year, visitors are also given the choice of going further afield and pitching in secret meadows, sheltered glades or a high bluff with views out over the Mawddach estuary. Streams and dry stone walls forge their way over the fields and through the woods, while the facilities are suitably wild – extending only to something described as “a tree bog compost toilet”. Best not to ask, I think.

• Graig Wen. From 25 July to 21 August; adult £7 (£10 on Fri/Sat); child £3 (£5); discount offered for backpackers/cyclists; +44 (0)1341 250482.

Gwern Gof Uchaf, Capel Curig, Gwynedd

One for high altitude campers, Gwern Gof Uchaf is an exposed site directly beneath Snowdonia’s famous Tryfan peak and is part of a working hill farm stretching for 750 acres above the Ogwen valley. The Carneddau and Glyders summits can also be tackled from this base camp which is open all year, so you can even introduce your tent to some snow (it’s wonderfully insulating, you know). Comfort comes in the form of hot showers, close by.

• Gwern Gof Uchaf. Adult £4, child £3; +44 (0)1690 720294.

Glyn Y Mul Farm, Aberdulais, West Glamorgan

The river Dulais runs through Glyn Y Mul’s 18-acre wood, making it a memorable location for a bit of communing with nature. The owners particularly welcome grub-eating survivalists to their Lone Wolf Campsite but are also happy to accommodate visitors who merely want to get away from it all. Best of all, should everything go pear-shaped with your attempt to create a shelter from mud filtered through the shells of beech nuts, you can crawl out of the woods for a hot power shower.

• Glyn Y Mul Farm. Adult £5, child £2.50; +44 (0)1639 643204

Camping Wild Wales, Trefin, Pembrokeshire

This is a site whose owners’ mission statement importunes visitors to slough off their urban selves, “strip away those outer layers and feel the breeze of freedom”, so chilling out and relaxing are pretty much compulsory. Lodged halfway between St David’s and Fishguard, just off the Pembrokeshire Coast Path, there’s plenty of room to spread out your shelter of choice or you can take refuge in one of their tipis.

• Camping Wild Wales. Adult £7, child (4-14) £3; +44 (0)1348 837892.

Hole Station Campsite, Highampton, Devon

There are 45 acres of meadow and woodlands at Hole Station but only twelve pitches, making it a little piece of heaven for those who agree with Sartre’s maxim that hell is other people. Approached down a long private lane in a sumptuous, yet quiet, corner of Devon, it’s little wonder that Hole railway station, from which the site takes its name, has long since given up the ghost. You can also rent a tent – very useful if you’re travelling light on the Devon coast-to-coast route, for which Hole marks the halfway point.

• Hole Station Campsite. £12 per pitch (inc. 2 people), extra adults £4, U16s £3, dogs £1. Camp fire kit £5; +44 (0)1409 231266

Yellow Wood Bush Camp, nr Hay-on-Wye, Herefordshire

The folk at Yellow Wood are very much in touch with their inner Ray Mears and offer all manner of courses on bushcraft and wilderness survival on their clutch of forested sites in the shadow of the Black Mountains. However, if you just want to bring along your tent, or string up a tarp or a hammock and do your own thing, that’s cool too. For that added wild touch, the precise location of their sites is not revealed until you’ve booked yourself in.

• Yellow Wood Bush Camp. Adult £5, child £3; +44 (0)7800 767519.

Ashwood Farm, East Grinstead, West Sussex

Proving that being within commuting distance of the capital is still no barrier to camping in the wilds, this farm near the Sussex/Surrey border provides a haven of sylvan tranquillity. It’s also a paradise for children who are free to race up and down the hill, build their own woodland wigwams, dens, shelters or fairy houses according to taste, or just idle away the hours on a tree swing. There’s also a big discount if you can arrive by public transport or under your own steam.

• Ashwood Farm. With car: adult £12; child £6. Without car: £8/£4. Fire kit £5. +44 (0)1342 316129

Dernwood Farm, Waldron, East Sussex

A small family-run farm, Dernwood has an 8-acre field in the woods in which you can pick your spot and another 60-odd acres of ancient forest to explore once you’ve set up camp. The only concessions to home comforts are a water tap and a recently installed loo in a nearby shed. For those who insist on being kept in touch with the outside world, newspapers can be delivered to the farmhouse, a ten-minute walk away. A fleet of wheelbarrows is also on hand for ferrying your gear through the woods.

• Dernwood Farm. Adult £6.50, child (5-15) £4.50, family (2 adults 2 children) £17.50; +44 (0)1435 812726.

And a final one for anyone who wants to try out a wild campsite in Scotland before heading off into the countryside beyond:

Duloch Hamlet, Inverkeithing, Fife

Offering what they euphemistically describe as “limited rustic facilities” (a sawdust toilet and a stand pipe), Duloch Hamlet is a mixture of clearings in woodland and meadows. There are fifteen acres of woods to get happily lost in and hides for watching badgers and deer. There’s also a herb garden if you fancy adding that final flourish to your al fresco feast, and a few pre-erected tents available if you prefer to travel ultra-lite.

• Duloch Hamlet. £6 per person; log kits £3; +44 (0)1383 417681.

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