Street children: the facts
New Internationalist, April, 2005
Who are these children?
The usual image is of young homeless people who live and work on the streets. But it is better to think of street children in terms of their relationship to the street. Some come from street families. Others live mainly on the street but may go back to the family home in the evenings or make sporadic visits. Yet others sleep in night shelters. A proportion endure periods in jail or institutions or spend their days working in open air markets. Most are working children.
All are individuals first with their own unique, complex lives.
How many are there?
Nobody knows for sure. Estimates differ widely--anywhere from 30 to 170 million. Their mobility and the fact that they move in and out of street living make them difficult to count. They are not included in surveys and censuses. There are no global statistics and the most reliable national ones come from agencies on the ground.
Particular circumstances such as warfare, deteriorating economies and natural disasters can increase their numbers. Thus, prior to the 1991 Gulf War there were no reported street children in Iraq; with the ongoing conflict, UNICEF is alarmed by the growing numbers of orphans on the streets. (1)
Family ties (4)
* Only a minority have no contact with their family. In Brazil about 90% have either a home life or occasional contact with their family.
* Poverty and social vulnerability put pressure on families and drive children on to the streets. In Kingston, Jamaica, over 90% of street children came from single mother families.
* Family dysfunction, often fuelled by poverty, also pushes children out. In the United States poverty is not the main factor--a majority of the estimated 750,000 to 1 million street children have fled physical or sexual abuse.
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A matter of gender
* While there are far fewer girls than boys, the estimates (that girls make up between 3% and 30 % of the street child population) are so wide as to be almost meaningless. Girls are more vulnerable to violence (including sexual attacks) on the street, although this is a problem for boys, too. Many get lured into brothels.
* Countries where the reported sexual exploitation of girls is at its highest are India, the US, Thailand, Taiwan, Brazil and the Philippines. Post-communist Eastern Europe has also seen an explosion in child sexual exploitation. (2)
* UNICEF estimates that over 2 million children, mainly girls, are exploited through prostitution and pornography. 1.2 million girls and boys are trafficked each year--many to join the sex trade. (3)
Violence (4)
* Law and order officials and self-styled vigilantes both attempt to 'clean the street' of these children in many parts of the world. In Latin America the problem is particularly acute with the worst offenders being Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala and Honduras. An average of three street children are killed every day in the state of Rio de Janeiro. In Cairo, street children are routinely rounded up and beaten by the police, their heads are shaven and then they are transferred to crowded detention centres.
* Higher rates of drug use and involvement in petty crime make them vulnerable to violence from others like them. The main reason for gang membership is protection.
Health
* Much more prone to diseases associated with risky sexual activity and/or drug use. In Toronto 50% of street children surveyed had chlamydia. (4) In Cambodia, 40% of all new HIV infections are in street working children. (6) In Guatemala 53% had sexually transmitted diseases.
* The Guatemalan study also found 92% of the children had lice and 88% had contracted upper respiratory infections due to exposure. Skin infections were also common. (7)
* Studies conducted in Nepal and Guatemala showed that urban street children were in better health than children in stable homes in farming villages: an indicator of the depths of rural poverty in these countries rather than a recommendation for life on the street. (5)
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RELATED ARTICLE
Snapshots from Africa (8)
Deepening poverty and the devastation caused by AIDS in many African countries has led to traditional social supports disintegrating, pushing children on to the streets:
Egypt
The average age of street children is 13 years. 42,505 children were arrested in 2001; 10,958 were charged with being 'vulnerable to delinquency'.
Sudan
With poverty rates as high as 90% among the general population, there are 70,000 street children in Northern Sudan, 86% of them boys. The vast majority are employed.
Benin
An estimated 50,000 are trafficked to nearby countries where they often end up selling goods on the street.
Democratic Republic of Congo
NGO estimates range from 12,000 to 25,000; the Ministry of Social affairs says the number is closer to 40,000.
Ethiopia
The war-torn 1980s and 1990s caused large increases in the numbers of street children; estimates around 150,000.
Kenya
250,000 estimated. (Half of the general population of the country is under 18.)
South Africa
250,000 nationwide.
Gambia
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