DaRk WaVe
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ever thought about the Children who sell little things out on roads, clean your wind shields & beg you for money...
I suppose you would have thought at least once about them
purpose of thread
To let you people know about these innocents & take out mere five minutes out of your lives & think about them
PS: Don't turn it into a XYZ vs ABC thread
I suppose you would have thought at least once about them
purpose of thread
To let you people know about these innocents & take out mere five minutes out of your lives & think about them
PS: Don't turn it into a XYZ vs ABC thread
PAKISTAN: 1.2 Million Street Children Abandoned and Exploited
An estimated 1.2 million children are on the streets of Pakistan's major cities and urban centres, constituting the country's largest and most ostracised social group. These include 'Runaway' children who live or work on the street, as well as the minority that return to their families at the end of the day with their meagre earnings.
According to a United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) survey, 72% of working children do not have contact with their families and 10% have no knowledge of their families.
"World Vision is gravely concerned with their growing numbers. Children are turningto the streets amidst increasing poverty, unemployment, swelling family size and social disintegration seen in abuse in schools, as well as domestic violence, neglect and family breakdown," said World Vision Country Director, Sigurd Hanson.
Statistics bode ill for this nation where more than 40% of the population is under 15, 48 million people live below the poverty line and earn less than US.00 a day. Nine out of 100 children die before they reach their first birthday. Half the population is illiterate.
"Street wise" as early as four, these children beg and scavenge around rubbish dumps or industrial waste sites or take on menial jobs as cart pushers or dish washers, working 12-15 hours a day to earn around 75 rupees or US.25- enough to buy a meal if they are fortunate. Most survive by prostituting themselves, stealing or smuggling, making them vulnerable to contracting sexually transmitted infections, HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, Jaundice and liver or kidney disorders. A large proportion
sniffs cheap, readily available solvents to starve off hunger, loneliness and fear.
Child 'rental' for begging is a new and increasingly popular phenomenon among poor households. Parents 'rent' their children out to an individual or group and both parties share the child's earnings. The inhumane treatment drives children to drugs and into the arms of criminal gangs who promise protection, food and a better life.[Source: CRIN]
Number of street kids rises in City
KARACHI - The number of street children is increasing alarmingly due to the sheer negligence of the authorities
concerned, while the figure of these children across the country has reached to 1.2 million out of which 30,000
homeless children are in Karachi, The Nation learnt on Monday.
Around 43 per cent among the total population are under 15 years of age, including approximate 48 million
adults living under the poverty line earning less than one dollar a day.
The Society for the Protection of the Rights of the Child (SPARC) figured out population boom, urbanisation and
poverty - vital causes for the increase in number of the street children in Pakistan. Non-implementation of child
security laws is also to blame.
Among other reasons are widespread child labour and poor quality of education, which let the children to come
out on streets to share their family’s financial burden, however, abusive environment at homes and corporal
punishment in schools add to their miseries. In some cases bad company and desire for unrestricted freedom
prompt them to leave homes in rural areas and low-income localities of our cities, especially in southern Punjab
and parts of NWFP.
According to the facts, the City District Government Karachi has produced that in Karachi alone the number of
street children has crossed the figure of 25,000.
Children on the streets are susceptible to all kinds of violence and easy prey for all types of abusers. Being
young, poor, illiterate and defenceless, children are abused and exploited, sexually, verbally, emotionally and
psychologically. Violence could range anything between harassment to pedophilia, sexual abuse and sodomy,
coerced to join gangs of criminals and used as drug traffickers or turned into beggars by the beggars’ mafia.
The police are also among the leading enemies of street children, as indiscriminate violations against children
are committed with impunity because of no fear of reprisal from the law and the society.
Street children have nowhere to turn for protection, emotional support and comradeship except the members of
their own band in which often a bully (who himself could be a victim of physical and sexual abuse) treats the young or weaker ones as once he was treated as a child.
Some limited surveys and interviews conducted by various NGOs show that an alarming 80 to 90 per cent of the
street children are victims of sodomy, sexual and physical abuse not just by elders but older children within their
own gangs. A majority of them is drug addicted, and the most popular and affordable of the drug is glue what
these children inhale by putting it on a piece of cloth.
One can see young boys sniffing this glue openly on the streets and pavements that according to one user,
tingles nose and makes one slightly drowsy. The use of other drugs including hashish, and even heroin is also
rampant among of these streets children.
Children living on the street, start work as early as 4.00am, they beg and scavenge around rubbish dumps or
industrial waste sites and take on menial jobs as cart-pushers or dishwashers working 12-15 hours a day to
earn enough to buy a meal, if they are lucky.
Most survive by prostituting themselves and stealing, making them vulnerable to contracting sexually transmitted
diseases (STD)’s such as HIV and AIDS. They are also at high risk of health problems such as tuberculosis,
jaundice and kidney disorders.
A study by the Pakistan Society estimates that when the population was 10,000 in Karachi 83 per cent of street
children were sniffing glue between the ages of 8-19. 54 per cent left home at age 10-12. 45 per cent children
living on streets are involved in crimes and 49 per cent are at high risk of HIV and AIDS.
Be it economic or social factors, street children leave their homes for an uncertain future. They have no access
to basic amenities such as health, education, or food. In the back alleys of Karachi’s bustling areas, the stench of
urine pervading the whole place, children as young as five huddle in groups of 8 to 10 for warmth and security at
night.