Theguardian.com: Uganda's street children: 'The police beat us with canes. We live badly'

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2014 22:32:15 +0200

Uganda's street children: 'The police beat us with canes. We live badly'


Abuse and poverty is driving children on to Uganda's streets, where many
claim to suffer even more at the hands of police

* Amy Fallon <http://www.theguardian.com/profile/amy-fallon> in Mbale

*
* theguardian.com <http://www.theguardian.com/> , Monday 21 July 2014
16.34 BST
*
<http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2014/jul/21/uganda-street-chi
ldren-homeless-police#start-of-comments> Jump to comments (4)

After five years of <http://www.theguardian.com/society/homelessness>
homelessness, John is an expert at making his bed: he lays a piece of
cardboard on a stretch of cement, wraps a large bag around himself and
attempts to sleep.

The bags he relies on for warmth - which are plastic, or the types used for
rice and sugar - are collected from dustbins in Mbale, a town in eastern
<http://www.theguardian.com/world/uganda> Uganda. If he's lucky, a kindly
market trader might donate one. It's a small comfort for John, an orphan who
has grown up on the streets.

"We eat leftovers. I don't sleep very well - it's not very comfortable. We
live badly," he says, before huddling together with about 30
<http://www.theguardian.com/society/children> children on a shop verandah,
opposite a nightclub.

The worst part of John's life is the punishment meted out to him and his
friends by the very people whose duty it is to protect them. They are
accused of being criminals and chokora (scavengers), and beaten. "They cane
us, the police. Big boys cane us. They use sticks and they [punch] us," says
John, who is about 15. This usually happens at weekends, he says.

Child abuse in Uganda is a major problem. A free national child helpline,
set up with support and funding from Plan International about a month ago,
receives about 1,500 calls per day from children and adults, according to
the call centre manager.

A <http://www.hrw.org/reports/2014/07/17/where-do-you-want-us-go> report
published by Human Rights Watch (HRW) last week, based on interviews with
132 current and former street children aged eight to 18, makes shocking
reading. It found that in six Ugandan town centres, and the capital city,
Kampala, police officers, the Kampala Capital City Authority and local
government officials have "frequently harassed, threatened, beaten, arrested
and detained" or robbed young homeless people.

Boys in Lira, in the north, told HRW they had experienced police tying their
arms and legs and forcing them to lie under metal car seats; others said
they had been bound to motorbikes and taken to police stations. "There's
also pepper spray," says Martin, a street child turned social worker who had
been homeless for seven years.

The exact number of street children in Uganda is unknown "because nobody
cares", Martin says. A study by the <http://www.anppcan.org/> African
Network for the Prevention and Protection against Child Abuse and Neglect
estimated there were 10,000 such children last year - up 70% since 1993.

Martin, who works for an NGO offering psychosocial support and skills
training to young people in a remand home, says he frequently sees homeless
children with bruises and swollen legs. "One aims at the ankles of the
children and the elbows: they hit the ankles to the extent that a child
cannot walk properly," he says. Martin recalls his own experience on the
streets, in the 1980s and 90s, when he was beaten many times, he says.

It is often emotional and physical abuse, combined with
<http://www.theguardian.com/society/poverty> poverty, that drives children
on to the streets in Uganda, where the UN children's agency estimates there
are 2.7 million orphans.

Martin's experience echoes that of many street children. He says he lived
with his grandmother because his mother had leprosy and his father was away
for long periods on business. He says he fled to the streets to escape an
aunt, who had mistreated him.

John tells a similar story. He says he lived with his grandmother until she
died. His uncles moved into her house and threw him out.

According to HRW, some homeless children spend all of their time on the
streets. Many toil during the day as vendors, porters or in small businesses
for little money. Some undertake sex work. Homeless young people are
vulnerable to sexual assault, which is rarely reported to police.

Lugging the heavy suitcases of bus passengers earns John about 3,000 Ugandan
shillings (67p) some days. He says he was taken to a police station in
March, before being sent to a remand home for a month. He had no idea why he
was there. "They don't tell you what your case is," John says.

Maria Burnett, senior researcher in HRW's
<http://www.theguardian.com/world/africa> Africa division, says: "What
[Uganda] needs to do is ensure children can report violence of any kind to
the authorities and then prosecute police and members of the public who
abuse children."

HRW recommends that Uganda's international partners condemn roundups of
street children, which it claims are sometimes ordered by the gender
ministry as well as other officials. Donors considering how to provide
development assistance to Uganda should support child protection
organisations and activities directly targeting street children, with funds
carefully monitored, the report suggests.

Despite reaching only the fourth year of primary school, John dreams of
being a carpenter. If he could tell the president how to help children like
himself, he would ask for a home and a school.

Martin says he lived on the street until a friend got him a job. Then, aged
34, he returned to school. He wants to build a halfway house for homeless
children, and says the authorities need to be educated on children's rights.

Uganda's police commissioner and the gender ministry declined to comment on
the HRW report.

Patrick Onyango, a spokesman for police in Kampala,
<http://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2014/07/17/ugandan-police-abuse-h
omeless-kids-says-report> told the Associated Press news agency that HRW's
allegations were alarming and untrue.

MDG : Children in Kisoro, Uganda

Children in Kisoro, Uganda. Young homeless people are vulnerable to abuse at
the hands of police, according to Human Rights Watch. Photograph: Alamy

 





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Received on Mon Jul 21 2014 - 16:32:19 EDT

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