A US government watchdog has filed a secret report to Congress into allegations of child sex abuse by the Afghan security forces -- and the extent to which America holds them accountable.
According to the office of the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR), which today announced it had sent the classified findings to lawmakers, Afghan officials are failing to stop sexual exploitation.
Primarily at issue is the entrenched custom of what is known in Afghanistan as "bacha bazi" -- or the sexual abuse of boys -- and whether the US is turning a blind eye.
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It states that the Afghan government has failed to identify or help victims. In some cases, the Afghan government arrested and prosecuted trafficking victims as criminals.
"Victim-protection efforts remained inadequate, as all but one government-run shelter for trafficking victims remained closed during the reporting period," SIGAR said.
Neither the Pentagon nor the Afghan government immediately responded to requests for comment.
Under US rules called the Leahy Laws, the Pentagon and the State Department are barred from providing assistance to any unit of a foreign nation's security forces if credible information exists that the unit has committed a gross violation of human rights.
NATO forces headed by the US provide training, equipment and other assistance across the Afghan security forces.
Bacha bazi is not seen as homosexuality in Afghanistan, where gender segregation is rampant -- instead the possession of young boys decked out as pretty women symbolizes power and primacy.
President Ashraf Ghani this year laid out stringent penalties against bacha bazi for the first time in a revised penal code, but the government has given no timeframe over when they will be enforced.
The new rules came after AFP last year exposed how the Taliban exploit bacha bazi to infiltrate security ranks.
The AFP story detailed how Taliban insurgents are using children to mount crippling insider attacks that have killed hundreds of police in southern Afghanistan over the previous two years.
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