Wednesday, October 12, 2005

The Pathetic Reality of Street Children in Nepal

Eliminating child labor is a sound financial investment
Email Article Print Article Bhuwan Thapaliya (Bhuwan)

Over the past few decades, the standard of living of many urban Nepalese has risen beyond measure, even in the midst of political turmoil. But ironically, at the same time many poor children are struggling for survival out in the streets, sleeping on makeshift cardboard mattresses in main cities like Kathmandu, Pokhara, Dharan, Narayanghat, Butwal, and Biratnagar.

According to the CWIN (Centre for Child Workers in Nepal), every year more than 500 children are added to the streets of Kathmandu from different districts of Nepal like Nuwakot, Sindhupalchowk, Kavre, Dhading, Makawanpur and Dolkha. In the middle of this, we are compelled to doubt the so-called standard of living, when younger children are suffering throughout Nepal, due to multidimensional socio-economic-political problems. Is the standard of living mere economic jargon or merely a myth?

When we see children living on the streets the first question that comes to mind is "Why?" Forget about the standard of living, hundreds of thousands of children across Nepal are forced to live in the street and are subjected to exploitation, abuse and violence each year. They are trafficked into abysmal prostitution rings, forced into ceaseless violence and recruited into many other forms of modern slavery.

As this trend mounts, the government of Nepal, the international community, civil society, the United Nations and UNICEF must pull their heads out of the sand. Urgent questions now demand clear answers. What will happen to these children, or street children to be precise?

Before we go further, let us be clear about the term "street children." According to Human Rights Watch, "The term street children refers to children for whom the street, more than their family has become their real home. It includes children who might not necessarily be homeless or without families, but who live in situations, where there is no protection, supervision, or direction from responsible adults."

Moreover, UNICEF has sub-categorized and defined street children into three types: Street-Living, Street-Working, and Street-Family.

According to UNICEF, children from street families are children who live on the streets with their families.

Street working children are children who spend most of their time working in the streets and markets of cities, but return home on a regular basis.

Among these three categories, the reality of street living children is pathetic. According to UNICEF, "Street living children are children who may have lost their families through war or illness, or have been abandoned because they had become too much of a burden, or else ran away from their abusive, dysfunctional, poverty-stricken families and now live alone on the streets."

"They work, living and sleeping in the streets, often lacking any contact with their families. These children are at highest risk of murder, constant abuse and inhumane treatment. They often resort to petty theft and prostitution for survival," reports UNICEF.

Though the U.N. has estimated the population of street children worldwide at 150 million, nobody knows their exact number in Nepal -- street children are not easy to count because they move around a lot, within and between cities like Kathmandu, Patan and Bhaktapur.

Moreover, it is no longer a secret that street children statistics (based on broad definitions of "street children") are just estimates, e.g. Kenya: 250,000; Ethiopia: 150,000; Zimbabwe: 12,000; Bangladesh: 445,226; Nepal: 30,000; India: 11 million, according to media reports.

Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal, is among those cities like Bombay, Manila, Rio de Janaiero, Mexico City, Bangkok, Nairobi, where the problem of street children is very high due to the rapid growth of urbanization and many other problems, such as economic breakdown, social distortion, natural disasters and increasing family disintegration.

Street children are the worst victims of child labor in Nepal. Life on the streets has always been unstable, but it is further unstable in Nepal due to the deteriorating socio-economic infrastructure.

The life of the Nepalese street children is so pathetic that with the little money they make by street based jobs, such as rag picking, begging, porting, flower selling, newspaper selling, street vending, and shoe shining, they cannot afford one full meal a day, and most of the time they are hungry. It is hunger that is forcing them into criminal activities, and the ultimate reward they get is mob beatings or a jail term.

To survive, every street child has to work very hard and in many ways they are threatened with various forms of violence. Many such children develop physical complications related to their hazardous work and unhygienic living conditions. As a result, they become apathetic to social norms and values.

The horrible tale, sadly, doesn't end here. According to the CWIN, street children are often at greatest risk of violence from those that are responsible to protect them -- the police and other higher authorities.

"Police often beat, harass, sexually assault and even torture street children. They may beat children for their money or demand payment for protection to avoid false charges, or for release from custody. They may seek out girls to demand sex. For many street children, assaults and thefts by the police are a routine part of their lives. Some are even killed by police. Very rarely are those responsible brought to justice," reports CWIN.

Street children are a pervasive problem in today's Nepal, and the problem cannot be solved in isolation. Schemes alone are not adequate.

Where poverty breaks up families, economic and social policies must come together to help protect the dignity of children's lives. Moreover, the international community must back the efforts of countries like Nepal, that are willing to take comprehensive steps through programs with non-governmental organizations to reduce the number of children on the streets.

Fortunately, people around the world are joining a growing conscientious community to act for the betterment of street children. A legitimate global movement has emerged. Street children themselves are making their voices heard, for example, through grassroots movements such as the Global March against Child Labor.

Street children and child labor are two sides of the same coin. To completely lift the children away from the street into a safe haven, we should first wage a fight against the child labor.

Eliminating child labor is indisputably a sound financial investment. A recent reconsideration by the ILO (International Labor Organization) estimates that eliminating child labor over two decades would yield an estimated US$5.1 trillion in benefits for both developing and transitional economies where most child laborers are found.

"Globally, benefits would exceed costs by nearly seven times. Each extra year of schooling stemming from universal education to the age of 14 results in an additional 11 percent of future earnings per year for a young student who stays in school," the ILO reports.

Last, but not least, policymakers seeking to end the street children syndrome in Nepal must address the poverty that is most often the cause of the problem. Overcoming it requires an in-depth understanding of the factors that force children into streets, as well as effective interventions suited to each unique socio-cultural and economic environment.

The problem of street children in Nepal is complex; so the policymakers most employ multiple interventions that are integrated with one another. They should implement sustainable alternatives to keep children from returning to the hazardous and exploitive situations on the cold streets.

An additional vital component of eradicating the problem is the insertion of community awareness activities in project designs. For example, a public awareness campaign to educate parents, community leaders, local organizations, teachers, and civil society about the multifarious hazards associated with street children and its negative long-term effects on future society would be beneficial.

Let us not forget that the fight against street children is to expand the frontiers of human dignity and independence in the long run.

Tuesday, September 06, 2005

new link

Monday, September 05, 2005

Asia has the highest number of poor children

Asia has the highest number of poor children: Plan report

Almost half of Asia\'s 1.27 billion children live in poverty, without proper food, water, healthcare or shelter, says a new report by the global child aid agency Plan. While 80% of India’s 400 million children are poor, China has made some progress in tackling child poverty

Nearly 600 million Asian children, close to half its young population, are living in poverty despite the region’s booming economy, according to a new report. Asia has the highest number of poor children in the world, more than even sub-Saharan Africa, says the report on child welfare in Asia by leading international children’s charity Plan.

According to ‘Growing Up in Asia’, around 350 million children under the age of 18 -- nearly one in three of Asia's youngsters -- are "absolutely poor" meaning they do not have access to two or more of a child's basic necessities like food, water, healthcare or shelter. Another 250 million or so have no access to one of these basic necessities, making for a total of around 600 million poor children in the region, says the report that details levels of child poverty in Asia.

"What is happening here is catastrophic," said Michael Diamond, Plan's Asia regional director, at the report's launch. "Asia has more than twice as many severely deprived children as sub-Saharan Africa." There are 265 million poor children in sub-Saharan Africa, the world’s poorest region.

Absolute poverty was defined by the 1995 World Summit on Social Development as “…a condition characterised by severe deprivation of basic human needs, including food, safe drinking water, sanitation facilities, health, shelter, education and information”. Severe deprivation is defined as “experiencing one or more deprivations of basic human needs”.

The report says that despite rapid economic growth in many countries, including the world's most populous nations -- China and India -- many Asian children are being left behind and lack access to such basics as food, clean water, shelter, healthcare, education and sanitation.

India has the largest number of poor children in Asia, with 80% of its 400 million young children severely deprived, the Plan report says. Sixty per cent of all children in India can be classed as "absolutely poor", with almost half of all Indian children under five malnourished. According to the report, India also has the highest number of working children in the world.

China, the report observed, had made "great strides in poverty reduction in recent years". Only 13 million of its 380 million child population are deprived.

"This scale of child poverty will have a serious impact on Asia's future prospects, unless it is addressed now…If nothing is done by rich and poor countries alike, the lost potential -- and lost lives -- could be one of the most tragic failings of modern times," said Diamond. "We will be judged in future generations, future centuries, when they write the history and compare us, maybe, to the holocaust."

Half of Asia’s families are failing to benefit from economic growth and globalisation, says Plan. Among the causes for child poverty, the report says, are the pressures of rapid population growth on scarce resources, lack of access to education, healthcare, clean water or sanitation, caste discrimination, and weak governance and corruption.

Tom Miller, Plan’s chief executive and a former US diplomat, called on the world's richest regions, in particular North America and Europe, to cut domestic agricultural subsidies to allow farmers in the world's poorest countries to make more from their exports.

The report recommends that rich nations write off Third World debt, although it says this must go hand-in-hand with improved levels of governance to ensure that the most vulnerable feel the benefits in the form of improved health services and education.

Plan itself has pledged to spend $1 billion on poverty reduction in 12 Asian countries -- Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Thailand, East Timor, Vietnam and the Philippines -- over the next 10 years. The 68-year-old agency says it will try to give children a voice and change the attitudes of many societies towards their treatment of under-18s.

Thursday, August 25, 2005

welcome

Warm welcome !