Street Children
December 22, 2008Children and youth may take to the streets for a number of reasons including war, poverty, urbanization, political instability, natural disasters, family breakdown, AIDS, rebellion against their parents, insufficient income, and violence including physical, emotional, and sexual abuse. Children who live and work on the streets are often the victims of violence, sexual exploitation, neglect, chemical addiction, and human rights violations. For example, street children throughout the world are abused—and sometimes murdered—by police, other authorities, and individuals who are supposed to protect them
They often create family and security by living in groups with other
children. They may also sell small items, or undertake manual labour.
When there are no other means of survival, street children with and
without formal family contacts may resort to petty theft and
prostitution for survival. Street kids may prostitute themselves
because they need the money, because they are looking for praise they
can't get anywhere else, or because their families, or family contacts,
force them into this activity. They are extremely vulnerable to
sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV/AIDS. Child prostitutes
can be boys or girls, but are more often girls. Up to 90 percent of
street children use psychoactive substances, including medicines,
alcohol, cigarettes, heroin, cannabis, and readily available industrial
products such as shoe or cobblers' glue and paint thinner.
The potent fumes of these cheap and easily available inhalants hit a
part of the child's brain that suppresses feelings of hunger, cold, and
loneliness. Solvent-based narcotics offer them an escape from reality.
But they must exchange their temporary highs for physical and
psychological problems—hallucinations, pulmonary edema (fluid
accumulation and swelling in the lungs), kidney failure, irreversible
brain damage and, in some cases, sudden death.
Today's youth will become the largest generation to
enter adulthood. By 2025, its estimated that six out of ten urban dwellers are expected to
be under 18 years of age. Ignoring the rights of street children
threatens human development around the world. Street children deserve respect. They are valuable
members of society. Some street children run thriving businesses,
supporting themselves, their families, and other children. We must hear
their voices, listen to their stories, and learn from them. We need to
recognize that children and youth are full of imagination, desires, and
hopes and that they must be involved in decisions that affect their
lives.
They need access to counselling, information,
knowledge, skills, and a supportive community to protect themselves
from harm, help them move off the street, and take back control of
their future. They also need better access to health and safety
services—medical care, legal aid, and food—and business training so
they can develop safe and more profitable ways of earning money.
These children
are not just victims—they are survivors. They often show incredible
resilience in overcoming or living in the midst of adversity. They have
developed coping mechanisms for caring for themselves, and for friends
or family members. These children are active participants in their
families, workplaces, and communities.
But, without improved protection and promotion of
their rights together with increased opportunities, many of these
children are likely to remain marginalized throughout their childhood
and into adulthood.
Whatever the reality, when working to improve the
lives of street children, it is
(Excerpt from http://www.acdi-cida.gc.ca/CIDAWEB/acdicida.nsf/En/REN-218125542-Q3B)
These shall only be achieved if the rates and levels of poverty within our respective communities are brought down to manageable levels and where each family is able to provide for itself on a day to day basis, giving the children the time and opportunity to explore and live out their childhood.
These leads us to the Millennium development goals in which these issues are targeted and to which many governments in the world, especially the developing countries (Kenya included) signed and committed themselves to achieving.
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Posted by Simon Karwamba. Posted In : Street Children