Afghanistan's Children of War
The United Nations issued a report on Wednesday stating that the number of civilians killed or wounded in Afghanistan rose by 23 percent in the first six months of 2013, with women and children faring the worst -- killed by roadside bombs almost every day. An earlier UN report noted that "Afghanistan remains one of the most dangerous places in the world to be a child". Over a third of Afghans are living in abject poverty, violence is escalating as NATO forces withdraw, and years of international aid has done little to decrease the abuse of women and children. These children, growing up in a country torn by warfare for decades, do their best to live normal lives -- learning to cope with the dangers, finding time to play when they can, and learning lessons from the adults all around them. The photos below are part of the ongoing series here on Afghanistan. [44 photos]
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An Afghan refugee girl, in a mud house built with help from the Norwegian refugee council in Ghorian district of Herat province, Afghanistan, after returning to her home country on May 27, 2008. Many Afghan refugees struggle to rebuild their lives in their shattered homeland after spending years, sometimes decades, in Pakistan and Iran where they fled over the last 30 years of almost continual war.(Reuters/Ahmad Masood)

Afghan children run to school on September 24, 2012, in a village on the road to Naghlu, near the French army base.(Jeff Pachoud/AFP/Getty Images)
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