Have the women of South Sudan’s independence fight been forgotten?

Africa Daily - A podcast by BBC World Service

“Katiba Banat is not just a word. We were soldiers. Even we lost some of our soldiers – women like us”During the second Sudanese civil war, a group of young female volunteers formed an all-women battalion in the rebel Sudan People’s Liberation ArmyThey worked with weapons or as medics and sang songs on the radio and in the bush as part of the SPLA’s recruitment driveAfter a few years in combat most left to get married and have children, becoming refugees and scattering all over the world as the bloody civil war rolled onThey say their contribution has been ignored by those in charge of independent South SudanBut now their stories are being told by one of their daughters, film-maker Adhel AropPresenter: Alan Kasujja (@Kasujja) Guest: Adhel Arop (@AdhelArop)