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October 29, 2006

Rwanda: Street Children - Turn Not a Blind Eye

Rwanda: Street Children - Turn Not a Blind Eye

The New Times (Kigali)

OPINION
October 29, 2006
Posted to the web October 29, 2006

Stephen Buckingham
Kigali

A long time ago I started writing for The New Times and my first article was about street children. Nothing much has changed in all those years. Street boys - and as I have said before, the problem is mainly boys - are found in every city in the world and no-one seems to have come up with a solution.

The street boy profile is the same everywhere. He is about ten years old. He may or may not have a family. In fact, in many cases he goes home to a family after a day playing and begging. In Nairobi, for example, the street boy syndrome has become the street family. Brothers, sisters and mothers all catch a taxi at the end of the day and go home to where dad has been boozing on their street earnings.

The main thing in common with the boys, however, is that they almost all sniff glue or petrol. We just do not take this seriously, and yet it is a very serious problem.

Sniffing is not regarded as a habit like using marijuana, cocaine or heroine. Yet it is substance abuse and can affect the physical and mental state of the user just as fatally. Most sniffers use shoemender’s glue. It gives a temporary intoxication with hallucinations. During the hallucination the user has very little control physically. He may experience a good ‘high’ feeling, but not always. Sometimes the high may be a nightmare and he becomes violent. To increase the effect most sniffers put the glue into a discarded plastic milk bag. He then blows into the bag and quickly sniffs his breath and the glue vapour back. For about five minutes he is totally out of control.

On my first visit to Kigali in 1995, I was sitting in a pavement bar, which no longer exists. It was on a busy street and across from the bar several street boys had made their pitch. There were not so many motorbikes around then, thank goodness, but a few carried passengers from place to place.

From the bar I watched one boy take his ‘hit’. He blew into his ‘booty bag’ and took a sniff. He was off! He started singing and shouting, dancing into the road, oblivious of the traffic. One motorcyclist, with passenger, swerved to avoid him. The passenger was thrown off and broke his leg. The traffic stopped and a Good Samaritan driver helped the injured man into his car and took him off to hospital.

This was just outside a police post in town. The police just stood and watched and then took the registration number of the motorbike and the car. The sniffer continued to dance around until the ‘high’ was over and then he returned to the pitch to take another sniff. Nobody took any notice of him.

Kigali has changed a great deal in the ensuing years, but some things never change. There are fewer street boys in the centre of town, but they have dispersed to the various shopping centres outside. Kisimenti is a favourite pitch for many of them and you cannot go to Ndoli’s, the bank or the pharmacies there without hearing ‘cent francs pour manger’. There, by your side is the street boy, ‘booty bag’ or bottle of glue in hand, asking for money which he certainly will not spend on food.

Last week I noticed one young sniffer sitting in the central reservation between the streams of traffic. He was sniffing shoemenders’ glue, totally oblivious of everything around him. His eyes were red and glazed. His skin was pockmarked and scabrous - a feature of prolonged glue use. Two policemen were on duty at that very busy crossroads. They ignored him.

There was a small incident with a rather happy customer who had just left Chez Lando. He had obviously made some proposal to a young lady, which she did not approve of. Immediately the Local Defence were upon the man and the police were drawn into the altercation, which was all entirely verbal and over within seconds. But still everyone ignored the glue sniffer in the middle of the road.

We do not know how to handle the street boy problem. I have worked in education for nearly forty years. I did youth work in England for seventeen years, often in collaboration with the police. I am no nearer finding a solution to the young sniffers’ problem than when I first encountered it. In Kenya I befriended a young street boy; he showed a high degree of intelligence. I told him that if he gave up the glue I would assist him with school books. For a while he seemed to improve and my wife and I gave him school equipment and bought him a school uniform. He disappeared for several months.

Then one day I saw him at the shopping centre again. He was back in his street rags. His skin was leprous and he held something in his jacket which he kept sniffing on. This time he had moved up into the big stuff. He was sniffing pain relief spray. He was incoherent, though he still recognized me. There was nothing I could do, beyond having him arrested. But for what crime? The police would just say they had better things to do. The ‘do-gooders’ who gave the boy the money to buy the spray would simply say, "Leave him alone. He’s only a boy. He’ll grow out of the habit." But they don’t grow out of the habit.

It seems an odd connection, but you only have to look at the current problems Sir Paul McCartney is having with his estranged wife. This man, one of the greatest rock song writers in history, experimented with drugs in his younger days. He admits that. Now, nearly an old age pensioner, his wife cites his drug use as a reason for their separation. He has money. He can slake his addiction safely. An African street boy must either go for cheap, bad stuff, or turn to crime to satisfy his needs.

One group of church workers in Nairobi tried to persuade shoppers to buy small items of food which they then distributed to the boys. It was a good idea and it worked for a while. In Kigali the owner of the bar where I sat watching the boys promised each boy a half litre of milk each day if they did not sniff. That also only lasted for a while. Whatever we do, it only seems to last for a while.

What can we do?

Firstly, we must recognize that it is a serious problem. Sniffing can lead to more serious behaviour disorders. More often it leads to an early death. The boys spend what little they have on glue, which the shoemenders’ irresponsibly sell them. They don’t eat and they die of starvation in the streets or maybe under the wheels of a car as they dance through the streets.

The adhesives which are openly sold and used here by the shoemenders are banned in many countries. Unfortunately the alternative, though safer, is much more expensive and a simple repair to your only pair of shoes, which might cost you one hundred francs, with the safer non-addictive adhesives would be well over a thousand. So we rely on the addictive glue. I use it in many small jobs around the house, but it is kept well out of the reach of anyone who might misuse it. In England I couldn’t even buy it without a licence, after declaring its usage.

It is not the glue which is the criminal here. It is society’s attitude to the distribution and usage. In a recent encounter with some Bureau of Standards officers who were clearing the Kisimenti shop shelves of ‘out-of-date’ cosmetics, which are of no consequence whatsoever, I suggested that their training in hounding might well be better used. The control of substance abuse is a very good place to start. Any shoemender - or other user of the adhesives which the street boys seek - who sells such adhesive to an unregulated user should be instantly prosecuted and put out of business.

The street boys are very streetwise and they will very quickly find an alternative source, but we must practice deterrent measures and cut down their options. I do not believe that cutting down availability increases the ‘romance’ of the criminality; not in the case of simple drugs. If a substance is difficult to get hold of, the street boys will just abandon it. After all, they want to live on ‘Easy Street’ and when we stop freely handing out money and the police enforce regulations against the use and availability of such substances, they might be persuaded that life is not quite so easy on the street and look for an alternative.

That alternative could be supplied by the huge population of clergy we have in this country. It is not enough to just sing the praises of Jesus, who said, "Suffer little children to come unto me and forbid them not, for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven." We must also put in place the means for such little children to come to a better life. There are a multitude of brothers and sisters of God in Rwanda who spend too much time on their knees and not enough time on their feet. I plead with you, get out on the streets and see what the Kingdom of Heaven is in reality. Turn a cheek, but don’t turn a blind eye.

October 20, 2006

Rwanda: Street Children Get Skills

Rwanda: Street Children Get Skills

The New Times (Kigali)
October 20, 2006

James Tasamba
Kigali

About forty former street children picked from Ruhengeri town received certificates and tools on Wednesday October 18, after completing training in different technical activities.The children completed training in tailoring, carpentry, welding, and motor mechanics courtesy of caritas Ruhengeri dioceses.

Ruhengeri catholic dioceses’, Kizito Bahujimihigo handed over the certificates and work tools which included sewing machines, spanners, drilling machines and timber Landers and expressed the dioceses’ commitment to work with the government in shaping the youth to be productive and participate in the socio-economic development of their country.

"These children are part of our wider society and we should not let them wither in immorality. The catholic diocese is committed to work with government to find ways of integrating these children back to normal life" Kizitosaid.

Musanze District leader, Aimable Nsengimana, in charge of good governance who represented the mayor at the function, appealed to the children to utilise the tools offered to them properly in order to improve their living standards but not sell them for quick money. He said, "These tools if used properly can be a vital source of income; they are a good start as you integrate into normal life in society."

Nsengimana commended Caritas project for helping shape former street children into people with technical skills for income generation.

He noted that the action is in line with the government programme of helping all children live a descent life and with technical skills to improve their financial status. He reiterated the district’s commitment to have all children leave the street in Ruhengeri town. Emanuel Hakizimana, one of the children who received the training in carpentry expressed gratitude towards the training, which he said is a big boost for self employment. "I will never go back to the street" he vowed.

September 26, 2006

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."

August 6, 2006

incredible true-ish adventures: Christians and Condoms, HIlls Aplenty: Rwanda (a bit late)

incredible true-ish adventures: Christians and Condoms, HIlls Aplenty: Rwanda (a bit late)

(blog entry about a visit to Kigali.)
"It’s a bit scary. Our first night at dinner we sit at an outdoor patio and eat tilapia masala, fajitas, spaghetti marinara. A small pebble sails in, hitting Annamartine on the back of the head. Streetkids outside, lurking in the shadows. A man with a stick (is he employed by the restaurant?) makes halfhearted, vaguely threatening motions in their direction. They scatter, but when he settles back against the wall they re-circle. More pebbles, periodically. No casualties. After dinner, we walk out into the night and the kids swarm around, pleading with outstretched hands and big eyes. We set off walking, with vague ideas of finding a cab. We’re surprised to see the restaurant staff sprinting off in the other direction returning within minutes with a taxi. As we get in, the begging intensifies: kids sticking their hands pleadingly through open windows. Then, suddenly, as the taxi begins to drive off, the strategy shifts. A hand shoots in, fast as lightening and grabs for my purse. More hands grasp the door handle. We bang down the locks and fumble with window levers as the taxi driver slams on the gas. The kids continue running abreast with the taxi, first jogging and then sprinting, pulling the door handles, grabbing the bumper, climbing up on the back of the boot. The driver accelerates again, and the last few hangers on give up and fall back to be reclaimed by the night. Rwanda has over a million orphans, mostly from the genocide. Though I’d read books, seen movies, etc. I’d still sort of thought of the events in abstract terms, as a very tragic historical event. I didn’t have the imagination to understand that the genocide is still very real and present in Rwanda today. The street kids are only one manifestation."

July 20, 2006

Street Children to Get Training Centre

allAfrica.com: Rwanda: Street Children to Get Training Centre

The New Times (Kigali)

July 20, 2006
Posted to the web July 21, 2006

Paul Ntambara
Kigali

Street children will soon have an opportunity to gain vital training skills to enable them earn a living once a school called ‘Centre for Champions’ is completed. This was revealed by Antoine Rutayisire, the Executive Secretary of African Evangelistic Enterprise (AEE) - Rwanda, while at a function to lay a foundation stone for the school at the site in Rwamagana District, this week.

The centre is to be built with the assistance of Tracy and Greg Stone, from the First Presbyterian Church of Belview in the United States of America.

‘We decided to call this centre one for champions because we are positive thinkers. We want it to be a centre for excellence. We want these street children to discover their purpose in life through this centre, pursue it, achieve it and excel in it,’ Rutayisire said.

According to Rutayisire, they intend to construct recreational facilities like a football pitch, basketball and volleyball courts and other recreational facilities.

‘This will also be a centre for spiritual and moral excellence,’ he added.

The centre will house a music and language school. A 600-seater hall and an internet café will be added to serve the community and the centre itself.

In a moving testimony, a former street child only identified as Eric told those present how he has risen from the streets to entertaining the President at Hotel Intercontinental.

Eric, now a renowned artiste, won awards for best song on the theme of HIV/Aids held last year.

Through music, he has been able to tour the country and has also just returned from the United States of America, where he attracted crowds with his moving message in his music.

"The project is to be funded by the First Presbyterian Church of Belview at a cost of US$900 000, of which US$650 000 has so far been raised," said Tracy Stone.

"We started a project to build a church back at home, but we also found it more meaningful if we could channel funds in taking on another project simultaneously. This is how this idea of constructing this centre, sold to us by Antoine Rutayisire has evolved," she added.

Ms Stone came with a delegation of sixty three members from her church, who brought stones to be laid as part of the foundation.

As a sign of partnership, they will take stones from Rwanda back to the USA, to be part of their church foundation, she said.

The Chairman of the AEE Board, Bishop Onesphore Rwaje thanked Rwanda partners for the trust they put in his organisation.

He urged the local people and the local authorities to care for the centre, as it is meant for them.

Representing the Provincial governor, the mayor of the district Valens Ntezirembo, thanked AEE for its partnership and pledged to assist the organisation in its efforts to build the centre.

May 30, 2006

Poisoned Street Kids Discharged

Rwanda: Poisoned Street Kids Discharged

The New Times (Kigali)

May 30, 2006
Posted to the web May 31, 2006

Daniel Sabiiti
Kigali

Twelve street children aged between 13 and 17 years reportedly poisoned at ‘Total’ a restaurant in Remera suburb, were discharged on Friday May 26, according to reliable sources at Kigali University Central Hospital (CHUK).

‘The street kids who were admitted in critical condition on Thursday immediately were attended to by our medical experts. Some of them suffered from severe stomach upsets, running stomachs, fever, but we were able to treat all of them,’ disclosed a nurse at the hospital who preferred anonymity.

The discharged kids were identified as Emmanuel Ntirenganya, Claude Mfurayange, Paul Niyonsenga, Emma Cyabera, Emma Ngeninshuti, Ismael Ndagimana, and Jean Claude Dusabe. Others were only identified as Sibomana, Nshimiyimana, Niyoyita, Nshimirimana and Claude.

According to the reliable sources, the street kids were given food that had the unidentified poison after they allegedly tampered with some restaurant facilities.

Efforts to reach the hotel management or the Remera Police Post for comment were futile by press time."

May 15, 2006

Hundreds Illegally Detained in Former Warehouse

Rwanda: Hundreds Illegally Detained in Former Warehouse (Human Rights Watch, 12-5-2006):
Detention Center in Gikondo Must Be Closed and Children Released

(New York, May 15, 2006) — Hundreds of persons, many of them children, are being held in deplorable conditions in an unofficial detention center in the Gikondo neighborhood of the Rwandan capital Kigali, Human Rights Watch said in a briefing paper issued today.
‘ Kigali city officials who are running the detention center recognize that it must be closed. From the perspective of the children held there, the sooner, the better. ‘
Alison Des Forges, senior adviser to the Africa division of Human Rights Watch

The 13-page paper, “Swept Away: Street Children Illegally Detained in Kigali, Rwanda” documents life at the center based on the testimony of children and young adults formerly detained there.

“Kigali city officials who are running the detention center recognize that it must be closed,” said Alison Des Forges, senior adviser to the Africa division of Human Rights Watch. “From the perspective of the children held there, the sooner, the better.”

Thousands of Rwandan children eke out a bare living on the streets of Kigali and other urban areas, many having no adult care as a consequence of the 1994 genocide, war or the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Since 1997 city authorities have regularly rounded up street children as well as beggars, street vendors and sex workers. In 2005 they began detaining many of these people in a former warehouse in Gikondo, a short distance from the luxury hotels frequented by international visitors.

Authorities hold the detainees as “vagrants” under colonial-era regulations but rarely formally charge them, bring them to court, or afford them the due process rights guaranteed under the Rwandan constitution and international conventions by which Rwanda is bound. According to authorities, the site is officially meant to be a “transit center” with persons detained for no more than three days.

In fact, some detainees have spent weeks or months in detention before being released without any judicial procedure. Detainees receive inadequate food, water, and medical care; they sleep on the floor without blankets or mattresses.

“Detaining children just because they are poor, dirty, and have no one to care for them violates their rights,” said Des Forges. “Under international and Rwandan law, the state must protect these children, not just sweep them out of sight.”

“Swept Away: Street Children Illegally Detained in Kigali, Rwanda” is available at:
http://hrw.org/backgrounder/africa/rwanda0506/.

December 30, 2005

Peace Body Supports 1,160 Street Kids

The New Times (Kigali)


December 30, 2005
Posted to the web December 30, 2005

Eleneus Akanga
Kigali

The Foundation for Peace, Sports and Culture (SCPF) that operates in the Great Lakes region has sent to school 1,160 former street children and vulnerable kids. SCPF has fully sponsored 40 of the children, according to Dr. Louis Munyakazi, the foundation president who was addressing a press conference on their activities and road map held at the foundation’s main offices in Kigali.

"It’s three years now since the foundation started. We started with only five children, but we now have 1,160 different in schools. From one district, we now cover five, availing vulnerable children with education and we will continue to do our best," noted Munyakazi.

The foundation has spread activities to Gisozi, Kanombe, Kicukiro, Nyamirambo and Nyarugenge city districts. Plans are also underway to extend to other districts around Kigali and spread countrywide when the foundation gets more funds.

"The vulnerable ones are not only in Kigali, but also around the country. But this will depend on the availability of funds. Extension is one of our priorities," he said.

They use sport and culture to promote peace and reconciliation to educate children on how to be peace promoters. Other goals are to provide opportunities to acquire school-based skills to vulnerable children.

Charles Nkazamyampi, the foundation’s secretary general, pointed out that their mission was to find a way of uniting children through culture and sports.

"Sport is the only best option that can bring people together. We are not specifically looking at our children’s success at national level, but also at imparting morals and discipline," he said.

About 870 young footballers between 5 to 15 years of age are being trained. Others are thirty track, field athletes and sixty two young boys and girls who are being trained in cultural dance and drama.

They have recruited more than 30 coaches to train the children, according to Mutesi Gasana, the SCPF Public Relations officer.

"The foundation also organises debates and discussions each week on various themes relating to peace and reconciliation, tolerance, HIV/Aids and sexual violence. Thirty children are being given meals on a daily basis. We are soon taking our activities to Burundi and we have already made contacts with the Burundian Youth Minister," said Mutesi.

Other projects to be set by the foundation include a scholarship scheme and a medical care project for the children. It will also set up a children’s rights advocacy project and help to initiate a cultural troupe in each sector around Kigali city.

Meanwhile, the foundation recently hosted a Christmas party for children at Mumena Stadium. This was after holding sports activities between different district clubs. The competition had been going on since 10th this month.

The ceremony was marked by presentation of trophies to the best performers and winning teams. In football, the trophy was awarded to Nyamirambo district youth, with Kicukiro being crowned the runners up. The crowd at the function was also entertained with meals, dances and songs.

August 14, 2005

Rwanda’s street children

ReliefWeb Rwanda’s street children:
"Source: Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)

Date: 14 Aug 2005
Rwanda’s street children

Government wants communities to take more interest in the children left to fend for themselves.

By Fawzia Sheikh in Gisenyi (Africa Reports No 40, 14-Aug-05)

The authorities in Rwanda are encouraging local communities to look after an estimated 7,000 to 8,000 children who live on the street.

“We never had such a problem in the past,” said Anne Gahongayire, secretary-general at the ministry of gender and family promotion in Kigali.

“But because of the realities in the family after the war and the genocide, we have lots of children who have taken to the streets because their families have… become so fragile.

‘You don’t have anyone to blame right now.”

The street children are in part the legacy of the 1994 genocide in which some 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were massacred. But young people are often made homeless by simple economic pressures, and the tradition in areas such as Gisenyi and Ruhengeri where men can take several wives, leading to domestic conflict.

Rwandan politicians continue to develop new ways of helping them, but the message is clear — local communities, which have the closest ties with the children, must take on greater responsibility for their well-being.

The principle is similar to the way in which ‘Gacaca’ or community-based courts, rather than the state judicial system, are being employed to try those accused of taking part in the genocide, Gahongayire says. “We have to equip the community,” she said. “They know better. They can be trusted better.”

But the non-government organisation Point d’�coute, which has worked with street kids in Gisenyi for the past seven years — providing counselling, food and blankets - says many in the area are shunning their children.

Aloys Kaberuka, coordinator of Point d’�coute, says Gisenye has 65 to 70 street kids aged 12 to 17, the majority of whom have parents who are simply unable to care for them.

“It’s very complex,” said Kaberuka. “I have some cases of children unable to find a resolution. It is possible they’ll turn to crime to support themselves because they’re in a bad situation.”

In an effort to earn money, children do odd jobs such as carrying loads or washing cars.

Claudine Muhamawenimana, a petite, unsmiling 18-year-old with short black hair, started out as one of these street children, but now rents a room in a mud-brick house.

Wearing a grey Adidas T-shirt, she carries her one-month-old baby Isame in a makeshift sack on her back in traditional African style. The child is sick.

Asked to tell how she came to be here, Claudine says, “It’s a long story.”

After her father died and her mother remarried, her stepfather refused to accept her.

Working the streets as a prostitute to make ends meet, she met a 20-year-old homeless man who bought her food, clothing and soap. But under the circumstances, she was still forced to continue selling her body. When she became pregnant, the man deserted her.

Point d’�coute has been instrumental in helping her. But there is only so much financial aid it can provide.

“I have no means to pay the rent, to feed the baby,” she said, sitting on a neighbour’s veranda. She wishes she had enough money to start a business selling cassava, bread and bananas.

The street children are by no means the only headache facing the government. It is currently trying to reunite as many as possible of 3,600 children now living in 25 orphanages across the country with their families.

And there are many children, particularly girls, who have been forced to assume control of households after parents and other adults lost their lives to Hutu killers during the genocide, or subsequently to AIDS. UNICEF estimates that Rwanda has some 100,000 families where the de facto adult is aged 10 to 18.

The United Nations agency has responded to difficulties in relying on social workers by offering these young heads of households a mentoring programme in which community members take them under their wing.

Rwandan politicians are working with international donors to establish a fund of nearly 11 million US dollars for organisations working with children. That money should be available by September."

March 13, 2002

RWANDA: Sexual activity among street children in Kigali

RWANDA: Sexual activity among street children in Kigali
NAIROBI, 13 March 2002 (IRIN) - A recent survey of street children living in the Rwandan capital, Kigali, has shown that most of them are interested in learning more about HIV/AIDS, said Johns Hopkins University, which conducted the survey in conjunction with an association caring for the children - the Myboboh Club. The median age of the interviewed children - 238 in all - was 13 years, ranging from six to 20. Most of them - 184 - were male, while 54 were female. Over half of those interviewed had lost both parents, and 13 percent had one parent.

Just over half the boys and over three-quarters of the girls interviewed reported having had sex. A full 35 percent of those under 10 were found to be sexually active.

Awareness among the children was found to be higher regarding AIDS than any other sexually transmitted disease (STD), with gonorrhoea and syphilis coming second and third. Almost all of the children (over 97 percent) were aware of at least one infection that could be transmitted sexually, and almost one-third of the boys and 10 percent of the girls reported having experienced one symptom of an STD. A full 11 percent of those aged under 10 reported having experienced one symptom of an STD.

In general, knowledge about HIV/AIDS was found to be good: a total of 92 percent of boys and 96 percent of girls knew that it was possible to prevent HIV infection. Sexual abstinence, followed by condom use, were the best-known methods.

However, only one-third of the sexually active boys and 8 percent of their female counterparts reported being capable of procuring a condom if necessary.

Condom usage was found to be very low, with only 36 percent of boys and 23.8 percent of girls reporting having used a condom. Only 4.3 percent of boys and 2.3 percent of girls reported using a condom all or most of the time they were having sex over the previous 12 months. Reasons for not using condoms included the following: did not think of using one (30 percent), condom not available (25 percent), condom too expensive (22 percent) and partner against use of condom (8 percent).

A total of 98 percent of girls and 72 percent of boys reported knowing a person living with HIV or who had died of AIDS. Interestingly, girls were more likely to perceive themselves to be at risk from HIV - at just over two-thirds, with 56.4 percent of boys thinking the same. On a similar note, more interest in gaining information about HIV/AIDS was found among girls (98 percent) than boys (85.7 percent).

The incidence of rape was found to be high: 63 percent of the boys reported having forced a girl to have sex with them, while 93 percent of the girls reported having been forced by either a boy or man. All the sexually active girls and 91 percent of the sexually active boys reported knowing someone who had been raped.

The average number of sex partners among the children was also found to be high. During the previous six months, the average number for boys was 2.9 and for girls 2.1. Among those who practised sports, the average number for boys was 2.7, while among those who did not the average was 3.8. On a similar note, the proportion of sexually active boys was 49 percent among those who practised sports, compared to 63 percent among their counterparts who did not.

Only 11.5 percent of the boys and 13 percent of the girls reported having used condoms or other forms of contraceptives with the specific objective of preventing pregnancy, as opposed to a means of protecting themselves from HIV or other STDs.

A total of 12.6 percent of the boys and 14.8 percent of the girls reported having engaged in homosexual relations.

Significantly, more boys (almost 30 percent) than girls (less than 4 percent) reported working for a living - mainly doing tasks such as haulage, car washing, petty trading and rubbish collection.

Nutritional status was found to be affected by this: while over 80 percent of girls said they only had one meal per day, 68.5 percent of boys said the same. Age, in turn, was found to play a role in determining nutritional status: 87 percent of children aged between six and 10 reported eating once per day, with 77 percent of those between 11 and 14, and only 56 percent of those over 15.

None of the children interviewed were currently attending school, and two-thirds had never attended school. Most of those who had attended school said they had completed less than four years at primary level.

The report issued by the Johns Hopkins University describes the street children as being "a high-risk population", characterised by early sexual experimentation, multiple sex partners, unprotected sex, drug abuse and poor nutrition.

Recommendations to those wishing to help are the following: the inclusion of an income-generation component in any project, information about STDs and the dangers of unprotected sex, and the development of life skills, including sexual negotiation, priority setting, and identifying the immediate and long-term consequences of chosen courses of action.

The information was sought from the children between 28 January and 15 February 2001. The results were published in March 2002.

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