World Street Children News

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May 8, 2002

STREET CHILDREN BEG FOR LIVELIHOOD IN BAKU

STREET CHILDREN BEG FOR LIVELIHOOD IN BAKU
Konul Khalilova: 5/08/02

While Azerbaijani President Heidar Aliyev negotiates over access to the Caspian Sea and tries to promote pipeline development in his country, children in the streets of the capital often make a simpler request: "Please give me money." One homeless Baku youth, Fagan, strolled recently near the 20th of January metro station. "We came from Yevlakh," Fagan, 11, said. "We are in debt, my mother is ill and my father is in Russia." Fagan and his two brothers, one 13 and the other 16, are all engaged in begging for money. "What can we do?" Fagan says. "A man we are indebted to comes every week and demands money."

Fagan lives in the Bileceri district with his mother and brothers. He didn’t want to say how much he earns in a day, but whispers that he has to pay out half of this money as ’protection’ for working on the street. His story is more common than ever. In Soviet times, to call someone a "street child" amounted to an insulting exaggeration. Since the Soviet Union collapsed, it has become more and more a descriptive term. According to UNICEF, which has been researching Baku street children since 1996, 47 percent of the capital’s homeless youth are orphans, a third have only one parent, and only one in five came from two-parent households.

Nigar Mansimli founded the "Umid Yeri" (Place of Hope) home for street children in 1997. She says that many street children are refugees from the Nagorno-Karabakh war of the early 1990s. Mamed, 10, says he was a baby when he became a refugee. "I lost my father in the war, and my mother is ill. Now I am begging for money," he says. Though Mamed lives in a hostel, he still begs in order to pay for food.

Even children with shelter beg for cash. "The main reason forcing children to go on to the streets is that they need money for their daily bread," says Tamilla Zeynalova, chairperson of the Children’s Committee of the Helsinki Commission for Human Rights in Azerbaijan.

Street children often have found themselves suddenly responsible for ensuring their own survival. Ilaha, 13, and Samir, 9, came to Umid Yeri claiming that their mother had died. "At first we didn’t believe them, but we went with them to the basement where they live and found their mother’s body," says Farida Najafzadeh, the group’s vice chairperson, "Can you imagine the condition of these children, sleeping in a box where hens laid their eggs?" Najafzadeh says that the dead woman appeared to have been beaten to death. Her children had no idea who killed her, she says.

Another child, Zarifa, lived in the streets with her mother before coming to Umid Yeri. "My father’s relatives put us out of the house after his death," Zarifa says. "She says her mother is in Turkey now. "She will come," she says. "She has no money to come now, but she calls me often."

Mansimli says she founded Umid Yeri so that the street children could have a transitional place for social and psychological support. "Fifty children can live in this house," Mansimli says, adding that the home began by housing only two children. "When we started we walked the streets at night and talked to the street children. Sometimes they agreed to come here, and sometimes not. But now every street child in Baku knows about this place, and comes here to eat and wash," she says. The home cannot accommodate all the city’s street children, says the director – and some decline to live there.

Beggars often have no other moneymaking skill. Kamala Aghayeva, who researches social conditions at the Azerbaijan Children’s, says street children need special schools and intensive attention. "The government is responsible for this work," she says. Dr. Tamara Dadashova chairs a childcare organization called "Sorge" (German for "care") and heads the Hematology Department in the Republic Children’s Hospital. She sees social problems driving children to the streets. "When both parents cannot find a job they send their child to the streets to earn money," she says.

But the state’s weak public health system also hurts the children, Dr. Dadashova says. "The street children who earn money washing old cars can inhale toxic fumes," she explains, adding that she thinks there is a greater incidence of blood diseases among the street kids. Other childcare specialists tend to agree, adding the more common health risks, such as cold winter weather. "How we can speak about the health of these children when they can’t wear jackets in the winter?" Aghayeva says. The state receives aid from many sources, but the presence of 700,000 refugees stretches this aid very thin.

Some adults who control gangs of street children, calling themselves "uncles," also intercept kids who might otherwise seek help. According to Aghayeva, adults "use the street children for collecting money" and keep them in cellars and other hideaways. "People who lead the children know that [some]one will give money when a child begs," she says. They also know that children will depend on them. "[One boy] said his so-called ’uncle’ has a Mercedes and they have a group in the airport where they beg for money," Aghayeva says.

Children also reportedly pay protection to their uncles from what they collect at transit stations. The adults frighten children from revealing information, says Aghayeva. "When we were talking to them they were scared to speak out, and nervously looked around from side to side."

As children grow up on the streets, pathologies develop. Zeynalova of the Helsinki Commission says that a new, criminal generation is growing up in Azerbaijan. "They will take revenge on society which is indifferent to their life," she warns, adding that the street is a good training ground for criminal gangs. "There are a lot of thieves and drug addicts among the street children."

Increasingly, workers also hear reports of rape and sexual abuse. "Sometimes we see beaten and raped children among those who came to the Helsinki office," says Zeynalova. "There are big men who rape children. And girls say that street ’protectors’ rape them too." Aghayeva says she met two teenage girls pretending to be mutes at a Metro station. After addressing the girls, she says she found out they were rape victims carrying out a con for $3.

Aghayeva calls for urgent action, including the setting up of a state committee, to solve the problems facing street children. For now, though, even tabulating the number of street children is difficult because children often refuse to answer questions.

May 7, 2002

Bands of children back on streets in San José

Bands of children back on streets in San José
May 7, 2002
By the A.M. Costa Rica staff

Bands of young thieves, called "chapulines" in Spanish, have reappeared on the streets of San José, mostly in the downtown area and mostly at night.

The groups of children number upwards of 30 or more and seem to be directed by adults. Some of the youngsters appears to be only 8 or 9 years old.

The youngsters, mostly homeless children, will use their numbers to steal, to roll unwary passersby and to practice aggressive begging. The Spanish word means "grasshopper" and refers to the way the youngsters move in roving bands like the crop-eating insect.

A group about 10:30 p.m. Sunday on the pedestrian boulevard confronted about 30 policemen, and officers said they were unlikely to take much action because the youngsters were protected by the law.

This is the first sighting in more than a year of the roving bands. The last attacks by youngsters was on Avenida 2 about 14 months ago. Then about 15 to 20 youngsters, all dirty and badly dressed, got the better of two intoxicated tourists and took money. The group at that time were directed by an equally badly dressed man and woman who shouted instructions.

Shortly before the first round of presidential elections, social agencies declared the city clear of street children. Some bureaucratic problems with funding had been resolved, and some centers for children had reopened.

The arrival of the street children menace coincides with the end of high tourist season. Not all street children are chapulines. Some prefer a more solitary life or crack cocaine and petty crime.

The inability of the police to take action has some observers in fear of extra-official efforts by vigilantes. This has happened in other Central American countries where murder squads, some probably composed of off-duty policemen, routinely torture and kill youngsters.

Casa Alianza reported Monday that in April some 53 boys and men younger than 23 years of age were assassinated in Honduras, the worst month for such deaths since the child advocacy organization began to keep records.

The organization suggested that the situation was ironic that the deaths took place even as the leaders of many countries are prepared to meet in New York to discuss the rights of children in a special United Nations session.

Last week Casa Alianza said that in Nicaragua an anonymous caller threatened to start murdering street children and Casa Alianza staff after the press reported on Casa Alianza’s efforts to prosecute policemen who illegally detained street children. The caller or his family obviously had been a victim of street crime.

Because hundreds of children and youth have been murdered in Guatemala and Honduras over the past several years by police, unidentified individuals and groups in a so-called effort of "social cleansing," Casa Alianza said it is extremely concerned that even the threat of initiating such killings in Nicaragua should be taken very seriously.

As for the situation in Costa Rica, "Groups of kids will continue to appear in San Jose until society and the authorities decide to invest adequately in children and the social problems that cause the kids to move around in gangs instead of being with their families," said Bruce Harris, executive director of Casa Alianza.

"Education is supposedly free, yet many kids cannot afford books, uniform, etc. Parents, too, have to be held responsible. Yet if you are a single mother and have four or five children that too is very difficult."

Harris said that 51 percent of children are now born to single mothers in Costa Rica. "Street children, child prostitution and gangs are merely indications of the larger social problem of family breakdown," he said in a response to questions asked by A.M. Costa Rica.

In addition, he said that there is at least one psychopath or serial killer free in Costa Rica who is responsible for the murder of two street girls — Yvette, 14, and Jacqueline, 17, — some 18 months ago.

May 1, 2002

NOWHERE TO TURN: State Abuses of Unaccompanied Migrant Children by Spain and Morocco

NOWHERE TO TURN:
State Abuses of Unaccompanied Migrant Children by Spain and Morocco

This is a Human Rights Watch Report. Clicking the link directly above will take you to this online report, available in several languages. Clicking the links below from the table of contents will take you to those parts of the report. 

I. SUMMARY


This shelter of cardboard and trash in the breakwater of the Ceuta port is home to a group of unaccompanied migrant boys who refused to stay at the San Antonio residential center after they were abused by staff and older boys living at the center. © 2001 Clarisa Bencomo/Human Rights Watch


Supplementary Materials
What You Can Do

II. Context III. Residential Centers IV. Arbitrary Age Determination Procedures

V. Expulsion and legal residence

VI. The lack of effective mechanisms for ensuring rights VII. Morocco’s failure to provide care and protection VIII. Recommendations To the Spanish Central Government To the Government of Morocco To Donor Countries
To the United Nations
To the Council of Europe
To the European Union IX. Conclusion

APPENDIX A

APPENDIX B ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

 

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