
INTERNATIONAL
Zimbabwe: Rescuing street kids
It is a few minutes before lunchtime and a disorderly queue of
dishevelled youths in ragged clothes has already formed outside the
doors of Thuthuka, a drop-in centre for street children in Zimbabwe's
second city, Bulawayo.
Dozens of youngsters from all over the central business district
converge here daily for a free lunch, a bath and a chance to wash their
clothes before returning to the city's pavements.
Thuthuka has led Bulawayo's initiative to help its homeless children
by also providing life skills education and counselling at the drop-in
centre, as part of a city-wide taskforce trying to address the growing
phenomenon.
The taskforce brings together the Thuthuka Street Children's home,
the Bulawayo City Council, government departments and the Bulawayo
Residents Association, among other interested groups. It has struggled
with dwindling donor support at a time when Zimbabwe's humanitarian and
economic crisis has added to the numbers of children and youth on the
streets.
Last week those efforts received a boost from the UN Children's Fund
(UNICEF), which donated Zim $27 million (US $7,700 at the current
auction rate) to the taskforce to help it complete a survey of the
numbers of children in need, as part of a rehabilitation programme known
as the Urban Vulnerable Children Project (UVCP).
By June the project aims to have a database of street children
“for
purposes of rehabilitation, including enrolling some of them into
schools”. The project will also provide the data required for
reproductive health care services among street kids in the peri-urban
areas of Bulawayo, train HIV/AIDS peer educators and “improve awareness
and access to information among the vulnerable children”, according to
the Bulawayo City Council.
Sifelamandla Khumalo, Thuthuka's projects coordinator, said
preliminary surveys had shown that, at a conservative estimate, there
were between 150 and 200 street children sleeping rough in the city
centre and eking out a living by begging. He welcomed the UNICEF
donation, but said the problem was growing and becoming even more
complex, as a second generation of children was being raised on the
streets.
“The street kids problem is revolving, in that we now have the
offspring of street children needing the same attention as their
mothers,” said Khumalo, adding that his organisation was already working
with 10 street girls and their children, all of whom were born on the
streets over the past two years.
“The growing number of children born to young mothers on the streets
is a new dimension, which needs a fresh approach. UNICEF would do better
to get deeply involved to save and provide for the newly born children,” Khumalo suggested.
“We also need more support for the extension of counselling, life skills education and a fund specifically for paying
tuition fees for some [youths] who will be returned to schools.”
The street children have long been regarded as a general public
nuisance by Bulawayo residents. The older youths are often accused of
involvement in petty crime, from cellphone snatching to muggings,
housebreaking and theft from motor vehicles. Young girls have also been
forced into commercial sex work.
Most of Bulawayo's homeless live in plastic shacks along urban
streams and around public recreational parks. The police clearly regard
these shelters as general criminal hide-outs. “It may not be the street kids who are into all these forms of crime.
Sometimes we find that fugitives on the run from the law take advantage
of the anonymity of this community to hide among them. That is why we
cannot afford to spare them in any anti-crime sweeps,” said Sergeant
Maxwell Kombo, a community relations officer at one of the city's police
stations.
Apart from the youths, a recent addition to the city's street
population is a growing number of adult vagrants. “Bulawayo is facing a growing problem of street dwellers in general
—
we have vagrants of all ages flooding the city centre. Our streets, long
known for their cleanliness, are fast becoming streets of shame. But
this is a social welfare and human rights issue, in which the city
council needs the support from government and donor organisations.
UNICEF has taken a commendable lead, and we will be pleased to get the
same level of support from other organisations,” said Bulawayo mayor
Japhet-Ndabeni Ncube.
11 February 2004
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