World Street Children News

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September 29, 2006

Street kids to join Dashain celebrations

eKantipur.com - Street kids to join Dashain celebrations

BY LEKHNATH PANT

KATHMANDU, Sept 29 - As Dashain fever grips the country and Kathmandu becomes emptier with people from outside the capital heading home to celebrate the festival, little do people care about whether Dashain is a festival for Kathmandu’s street children as well.

If, by any chance, that question arose in your mind, here is the answer: YES.

Some organizations working for children are busy these days scheduling Dashain programs for street children. Bishwa Bajracharya, executive director of Saath Saath, said his organization has several programs for street children starting Thursday. Among the programs are Changa chait (kite flying), party, clothes distribution and Tika ceremony.

Similarly, Child Protection Center and Services (CPCS), another organization, has also scheduled Dashain celebrations for street children. Bijesh Shrestha, in-charge of this initiative, said children residing in the organization’s drop-in center and those on the streets will participate in the observance of Phulpati, goat slaughter the following day and receive Tika on their foreheads like any other kid.

Voice of Children, another organization, tried to convince street children to return home. However, even if they don’t, there is a sweet Dashain fete they can join in.

Sanu Giri, the program officer at CWIN said there are approximately 1000 street children in Kathmandu at the moment. Although there is no official data, it is estimated that there were 2000 street children in Kathmandu in 1990 and another 5000 around the country. The number of street children in Kathmandu decreased to 500 in 2001. The number at present has again shot up to 1000 due to conflict, according to Giri.

Kumar Pariyar, a street child says he won’t go home for Dashain. He has been in the streets of Kathmandu for three years. He says he is from Beltar but is unaware of his home district. Happily, Kumar says he is celebrating Dashain with Saath Saath.

Bibek Moktan, a street child from Hetauda, is not even aware that Dashain is around. While saying that he came to the streets after the death of his mother and mistreatment by his step-mother, he asked when Dashain festivities start.

While the state has neglected these children, they cherish the rosy hopes of grace shown by some NGOs, INGOs and kind people for the food and clothes in Dashain.

Kathmandu Metropolitan City (KMC) has stopped dealing with the problems faced by street children, according to Raju Shrestha, the program manager of Domestic Child Worker at KMC. In the past, the unit was looking after the problem under an International Labor Organization project. The project is over now.

September 28, 2006

Street Children’s Projects In Mongolia

Street Children’s Projects In Mongolia
Footage of street children in Mongolia and projects to help them including the Verbist care centre supported by MIR.. more info on the projects we support on:
http://www.mirmedjugorje.org

September 27, 2006

Buenos Aires opens internet cafes for street kids

Buenos Aires opens internet cafes for street kids » VivirLatino

(blog entry) 

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I am not sure whether to applaud this or ask the question: "why internet cafes and not places for them to live?":

"The government of the Argentine capital inaugurated the first "cybercafe" for children and adolescents who live on the street, the first of five of these facilities expected to open in the city.

"More than a simple cafe with internet access or just a place where one can play games online, the new facility is a "learning and recreation" space to help better the living conditions of "these children that have lost almost everything," said Jorge Telerman, Mayor of Buenos Aires, during the opening of the cafe.

According to Spain’s 20 Minutos, these cafes will offer, on top of internet access, recreational and educational activities, and light meals.

The idea for this project was supposedly born from data that showed that homeless children in Argentina spent 60% of the money they receive panhandling on cybercafes.

While on the surface it seems like a great idea — providing internet access, and therefore access to information, education, and the world in general to these children — my mind can’t help but wonder why more basic needs aren’t covered first, like a home, foster parents, meals and education.

What do you think? Is this a good idea or does it overlook these children’s well-being?

monuc.org: Rights groups want arrested Congo children freed ::: 27/09/2006

monuc.org: Rights groups want arrested Congo children freed ::: 27/09/2006

KINSHASA (Reuters) - Human rights groups demanded on Tuesday that Congo’s authorities release street children rounded up after political protests in Kinshasa that stoked tensions ahead of a decisive presidential run-off next month. Over 800 people, including nearly 200 minors, were initially arrested following clashes last week between the security services, street children and supporters of Jean-Pierre Bemba, who is running against incumbent President Joseph Kabila.

Historic elections held in Democratic Republic of Congo on July 30 have resulted in Kabila and Bemba, the two frontrunners in the polls, heading for a deciding run-off set for October 29. Even before the elections, the first free vote in the vast, former Belgian colony in more than 40 years, rights groups had warned that feuding politicians might try to exploit Kinshasa’s thousands of street children in their campaigns. Although many of those detained since last week have been freed, more than a dozen children and some 100 other men and women, some with babies, remained in custody on Tuesday inside the police compound in Kinshasa.

"Give us bread," shouted some of the detainees, held in an area of concrete slabs covered with corrugated roofing, as police ordered Reuters journalists out of the compound.

"We are going to the police to try to ensure the release of the remaining children," Ambroise Bakajeka, interim head of a Kinshasa street children’s charity known as REEJR, told Reuters.

"This is a huge violation of their rights," said Amigo Ngonde, head of the African Association for the Defense of Human Rights. "They should have been released by now … We don’t know why they were arrested in the first place," he added.

CAPITAL TENSE

The police have denied any political motivation behind the detentions, saying they were merely part of the fight against criminals and bandits.

The July 30 first round vote went ahead mostly peacefully, protected by more than 17,000 United Nations soldiers. Congo has the world’s largest U.N. peacekeeping mission. But when the Kabila-Bemba run-off was announced on August 20, rival soldiers loyal to the two men fought three days of gunbattles in Kinshasa in which at least 30 people were killed. The largely pro-Bemba capital remains tense, his supporters have taken to the streets in protest several times this month and analysts fear further clashes with the security services.

Kinshasa police chief General Patrick Sabiti said the arrests had nothing to do with last week’s protests. "It was a police operation to arrest people we suspected of committing crimes," he said.

The elections in Congo are aimed at ushering in a new era after a 1998-2003 war that killed some four million people, mostly from hunger and disease, and crippled a nation already on its knees after decades of dictatorship and corruption. With no support from the government and just a handful of charities offering assistance, groups of children and youthful street hawkers roam the crumbling capital’s streets. "We wake up like this, we go to sleep like this … and we only get a bit of food in the evening," said tired-looking Deki Kitenge, 19, one of those arrested last week.

September 26, 2006

Nhan Dan — Citibank-funded vocational training course for street children opens

Nhan Dan — Citibank-funded vocational training course for street children opens

September 26, 2006
A vocational training course for 50 street children in Hanoi, which is being funded by the Citibank Fund, opened on September 25.

Total funding for the course, the third of its kind, will be VND 240 million (US $15,000).

During the three-month course, the children will receive training in hotel services, refrigeration equipment repairs and welding.

The Citibank Fund has so far granted VND 700 million (roughly US $44,000 ) to help provide vocational training for 132 street children in Hanoi. All the children who attended the first two courses have found jobs.

Statistics released by the Ministry of Labour, War Invalids and Social Affairs show that there are now around 21,000 street children in Vietnam, mainly in major cities such as Hanoi, Hai Phong, Da Nang and Ho Chi Minh City. (VNA)"

Govt to send street kids to school

The Jakarta Post - Govt to send street kids to school

National News - September 26, 2006
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

The government is initiating a program to send some 800,000 street children to school. Their parents, if they also live on the street, will be trained for work abroad or in other areas of the country.

The program will be jointly conducted by Manpower and Transmigration Minister Erman Suparno and Social Affairs Minister Bachtiar Chamsyah.

Erman said children living on the streets would sent to pesantren (Islamic boarding schools) and open high schools at the government’s expense, while adults would be trained to join labor export training programs or resettlement programs.

‘This is a new program that will start in January with the hope that there will be no more beggars and street singers at the traffic lights and in public buses in major cities,’ Erman told The Jakarta Post here over the weekend.

He said the government had allocated Rp 59 trillion (about US$6.4 billion) this year for effort.

He explained that street children aged seven to 18 would be sent to pesantren for elementary and secondary education before attending vocational programs at government-run training centers.

‘ "They will receive monthly cash aid to meet their daily needs while they study at the pesantren or open schools. After completing high school, they will undergo vocational training to ready them to work overseas or join the resettlement program," he said.

Erman said street singers who had already graduated from high school would be trained for overseas employment, and couples living on the streets would join the transmigration program.

"Working abroad, they are expected to earn at least Rp 1.5 million to Rp 2 million a month. Those joining the transmigration program will be resettled on sparsely inhabited islands across the archipelago," he said. He added that many impoverished parents have forced their children to beg on the streets to survive.

Marudin Simanihuruk, the director general for labor inspection at the Manpower and Transmigration Ministry, said he was still building a complete database on street children and street singers in major cities as well as on Islamic schools willing to participate.

"This program is part of the national movement to eliminate child labor and alleviate poverty," he said. "

Street Kids Released

allAfrica.com: Rwanda: Street Kids Released

The New Times (Kigali)
September 26, 2006
Posted to the web September 26, 2006

James Tasamba
Kigali

Three street children, who had been imprisoned at Groupe ma prison in Ruhengeri town over theft, were on September 25, released after spending two weeks in jail.

The trio, Shangira Waliboye 13, Musitafa Harerimana 13, and Jean Claude Nsabimana 12 all street children had been arrested and remanded in connection with the loss of a video- deck belonging to the proprietor of Intercontinental restaurant in Ruhengeri town.

The New Times learnt that the boys had been free with the lady’s home that when the machine got lost, she suspected the boys to have had a hand in it. But later it was discovered that the boys were mistakenly arrested, and the video deck was later recovered."

September 25, 2006

A peep into lives of street children

A peep into lives of street children

Film shows an orphan’s bid to get educated Film shows an orphan’s bid to get educated



POIGNANT: Master Kishen and B. Jaishri in a scene from the movie

C/o Footpath (Kannada)

Director: Master Kishen

Cast: Kishen, Sourabh Shukla, Jackie Shroff, B. Jaishri, Tara and Anil Kumar

Directed by 11-year- old child prodigy Kishen, "C/o Footpath" is a poignant film on the theme of imparting education to street children and on the need to shun the rigid rulebook on education to nurture their talent.

Although it is a film by a child, it succeeds in educating the audience on a few important social issues. Even if melodramatic, the film keeps the focus on the lives and problems of street children.

It uses humour to provide insight into their world where political pretensions, a straightjacketed educational system, child exploitation class disparities, and the stranglehold of multinational companies over the lives of ragpickers who live in slums.

The film is about an orphan boy named Slammu under the care of a ragpicker Doddakka (B. Jaishri), his attempts at self-education before joining formal school, and his determination to join the fifth standard, which he does with the support of compassionate individuals.

Cleverly constructed screenplay by Jogi and Udaya Marakkini, well-crafted dialogue by Mysore Harish and good music by Sri Shaila, who is incidentally the director’s mother, help Kishen narrate his story. The film is slated for release in October.

K.N. Venkatasubba Rao

Loving the street kids of Dakar wins hearts in Senegal

Loving the street kids of Dakar wins hearts in Senegal
Sep 25, 2006
By Erich Bridges
Baptist Press


Click to download Hi-Res Photo
A street boy holds the empty tomato can he uses to beg alms from Muslims in Dakar, capital of the West African nation of Senegal. Southern Baptist missionaries and volunteers minister to the street boys, known as "talibes" (TAL-ee-bays) or students of Islam, to help them — and to develop friendships in the community. Photo by Roy M. Burroughs
DAKAR, Senegal (BP)–It’s a tough life for a kid.

You wake in the darkness before dawn and roll off a wooden pallet — one of the “beds” you share with 30 other boys on the dirt floor of a grimy, three-room dwelling.

You rub your eyes, eat something –- if there’s anything to eat -– and begin chanting verses from the Quran, Islam’s holy book. You have no idea what the Arabic words mean, but you chant them over and over. You remember the day your mother brought you to this place and handed you over to your Muslim teacher.

“I don’t want to see him again until he knows the Quran,” she had told the teacher, following custom. With tears in her eyes, she pried your trembling fingers loose from her hand and hurried away.

You were 5 years old. You won’t see her again for a decade or more -– if ever.

The chanting done, you set out into the sandy streets of Yoff, a sprawling section of Dakar, capital of the West African nation of Senegal. Carrying an empty tomato can, you spend much of the day begging under the white-hot sun. People drop sugar cubes, food or perhaps a coin or two into your can, fulfilling their duty as Muslims to give alms to the poor. If you return without a full can, you risk a caning across your back.

Tomorrow will be the same -– and the day after that.

You are a “talibe” (TAL-ee-bay), which means “student.” The word comes from the same Arabic root word as “Taliban,” the radical Islamic “students” who ruled Afghanistan before being overthrown in 2001. In theory, you are a student of the Quran, learning to be a servant of Islam through poverty and humility.

In reality, you are a beggar.

Thousands of ragged talibes wander the streets of Senegal. Community leaders push to end the talibe system from time to time, but it remains entrenched in Senegalese Muslim society. Some talibes are treated relatively well by their teachers; others are neglected or worse.

Do poverty-stricken parents give young sons to be talibes for religious reasons — or because they are too poor to feed another child?

“They say it’s religious,” answers a Senegalese Baptist layman who ministers to talibes through a church in Dakar. “But it’s hunger.”

On this day, however, the talibe boys of Yoff are in for a pleasant surprise. As they trickle back from begging, they get a warm welcome from regular visitors: Southern Baptist missionaries Cal McIntire and David and Cheryl Johnson. With the missionaries are a group of student volunteers from Southwest Baptist University in Bolivar, Mo.

The Southwest volunteers, assisted by some laughing talibe boys and other neighborhood kids, set about hauling buckets of gravel and broken rock into the dormitory to sprinkle across the dirt floor. Then they spread sand and wet concrete over the top. When it dries, the boys have a clean surface on which to lay the new foam sleeping pallets their visitors have brought.

Later, the boys drop their filthy clothes into buckets of boiling water. Standing naked behind sheets, they bashfully submit to medicated treatment — repeated over three days -– of the scabies that ravages their skin. The contagious skin disease, spread by mites, flourishes on seldom-washed skin and clothing, causing agonizing itching and pain.

The volunteers fight back tears as they gently apply the soap and medication to the boys’ disfigured skin. When they’re done, they hand out new clothes and bags with toothbrushes and other basics.

“These kids are in pretty bad shape, health-wise,” David Johnson says. “In addition to malnutrition, they have all kinds of skin problems — mostly from sleeping in the sand.”

They also crave attention and love. They come running whenever McIntire, an easygoing guy with a ready smile, visits their neighborhood.

“The little ones almost never have anyone just hold them,” explains McIntire, rubbing the back of a talibe boy clinging to his neck. “David and I do that as much as we can –- just hold ’em and hug ’em.”

While they work to improve living conditions for the talibes, the Southwest students also participate in the “ministry of touch.”

“I did a lot of picking little kids up, putting them on my shoulders, lifting them high in the air and stuff,” says volunteer Jarrod Easterwood, age 22. “I loved it, just spending time with the kids. That’s what they love. They don’t get a whole lot of it.”

As good as such ministry feels, it’s not just feel-good ministry.

McIntire is missionary strategy coordinator for the 150,000 Lebou (LAY-boo) people of West Africa, who live mostly in Senegal. Islamic and traditionally fishermen, the Lebou settled the coastal peninsula, where bustling Dakar now sits, centuries ago. More than 18,000 of them live in Yoff.

Through working with the talibes — who have special significance to the greater community -– and other children’s ministries, McIntire and his co-workers have won many Lebou friends in Yoff. On this day, at least 10 neighborhood residents passing by pronounce blessings on the missionaries and volunteers for helping the talibes.

“We ‘love on’ the kids in order to share Jesus with the parents,” McIntire explains. “We’re able to come in and do more of what we want to do after we do something like this. The people here know we care about them.”

There are only a handful of Christian believers among the Lebou so far, but the first Lebou home fellowship began earlier this year –- in Yoff. McIntire hopes to see four or five more meeting by the end of this year.

One day, the talibes may be liberated from their service. Meanwhile, the Lebou are hearing about the liberating love of Christ.



Click to download Hi-Res Photo
Southwest Baptist University volunteer Andy Snyder hangs out with his new buddy, a "talibe" street kid in Dakar, Senegal. The talibe (Arabic for "student") boys are given by their parents to live with a Muslim teacher and learn the Quran. They spend most of their days, however, begging on the streets. What they need most is love — and plenty of it. Photo by Roy M. Burroughs
Click to download Hi-Res Photo
Southwest Baptist University volunteers Bethany Worrel (left) and Kaila Hedger apply medicated soap to a "talibe" street boy in Dakar, Senegal. Many of the boys suffer from scabies, a contagious skin disease that flourishes on seldom-washed skin and clothing. Photo by Roy M. Burroughs
Click to download Hi-Res Photo
Southern Baptist missionary Cheryl Johnson sits and talks with "talibe" street boys in Dakar, Senegal, while Southwest Baptist University volunteers prepare bags of food for the boys. Loving the often-neglected boys is a ministry in itself — and it opens hearts and doors in the wider Lebou (LAY-boo) community in Dakar. Photo by Roy M. Burroughs
Click to download Hi-Res Photo
"Talibe" street boys sleep in their "dormitory," a grimy three-room dwelling in Dakar, Senegal, that holds 30 or more kids. The talibe (Arabic for "student") boys chant verses from the Quran, Islam’s holy book, then go out each day to beg for alms on the streets. Photo by Roy M. Burroughs
Click to download Hi-Res Photo
"Talibe" boys head out for another day of begging on the streets of Dakar, Senegal, as part of their training as "students" of Islam. Photo by Roy M. Burroughs

September 24, 2006

Down There: Luanda Nightlife

Down There: Luanda Nightlife

Blog entry about a visit to Luanda….

"When we left, we were immediately besieged by a bunch of street kids. They chased after us as we got into the car, hoping to get a tip for “looking after” the car. As I had already agreed to pay an official guard to watch the car, I didn’t give the kids anything. They began yelling and insisting that we give them something. The guard was of course of absolutely no help when I actually had a need for security. He disappeared as soon as he got his tip. There must have been at least 8 of them and they were getting more and more aggressive. They started banging on the windows and yelling that they were going to break the windows or puncture the tires. Since other cars were blocking my exit, there was no escaping their little fists of fury. By this time, any sympathy I had for them as street children had evaporated, and there was no way I was giving the little fuckers a kwanza, although I was getting nervous that a window was going to shatter at any moment. Finally, somebody moved their car, and I drove off, with a couple of them hanging on to the car for a few seconds."

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