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Rwanda's street children
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'Écoute, 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'Écoute, 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'Écoute 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.
Fawzia Sheikh
15 August 2005
http://allafrica.com/stories/200508151253.html
See also: Kenya plan to move families
off streets riddled with problems
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