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Protecting children from dangers of migration in Uganda

Anne Lydia Sekandi , UNICEF

 
UNICEF correspondent Thomas Nybo reports on a UNICEF-supported project that rescues Ugandan street children from violence and abuse.

KAPUAT, Uganda (January 5, 2010) — At first sight, John is a carefree 15-year-old boy. Happy and cheerful, he enjoys his studies at Kapuat Primary School. Yet behind his bright eyes and wide smile, the boy masks the scars of two traumatic years spent on the streets of the capital, Kampala.

"I went to Kampala with my mother in 2004," says John. "My father had been killed earlier in 2001 when raiders took all the cattle away from our home in Kotido, so my mother thought we would have a better life in the city."

However, mother and son found themselves forced to beg and scavenge in order to survive.

"Life in Kampala was very hard," said John.

A hostile environment

Students at one of the ten UNICEF-supported schools in Uganda. | © UNICEF video/2009

© UNICEF video/2009

Students at one of the ten UNICEF-supported schools that have taken Karamajong children returning from street life in Kampala, Uganda.  

Things became worse when John 's mother was killed by a taxi. At ten-years-old he was alone in a hostile environment, forced to give money to street gang leaders for food and shelter and severely beaten if he couldn't come up with the payment.

Like John, dozens of other Karamajong children and adults have been lured to the streets of Kampala in search of a better life, only to find themselves trapped in a vicious cycle of begging and scavenging.

John's ordeal came to an end in November 2007, when he, along with hundreds of other Karamajong children and adults, was taken off the streets and brought to a UNICEF-supported transit center.

Dangers of migration

John, age 15, is enrolled at Kapuat Primary School. | © UNICEF video/2009

© UNICEF video/2009

John, age 15, is enrolled at Kapuat Primary School after returning from a harsh life on the streets of Kampala, Uganda.  

UNICEF-supported organizations resettle unaccompanied children like John and educate communities about the real dangers of migrating to the cities.

"Those who were sent back to Karamoja in 2007 say they went to Kampala to escape famine and insecurity," says John Bosco Ngoya, a priest who has worked in Karamoja since 1986. Along with other community leaders in Moroto,  Ngoya created the Bokora Initiative for Sustainable Resettlement Program (BISREP).
 
UNICEF and its partners make sure returnees get basic supplies such as food, accommodation and medical treatment. They also provide training for social workers who help people resettle into the community.

Enrolled in school

Children are enrolled in one of the ten UNICEF-supported schools that have taken Karamajong children returning from Kampala. The program also works at a broad level to identify and protect vulnerable children.

"We are working with the Ministry of Gender, Labor and Social Development to introduce better social work methods, in order to ensure the protection of the rights of children living and working on the streets through the stages of identification, withdrawal from the streets, and reintegration back into their communities and homes," says UNICEF Chief of Child Protection in Uganda Cornelius Williams.

John is happy with his new life and studying hard in school.

"I want to work hard and become a bank manager because I am good at mathematics," he says. Returning to Kampala is the furthest thing on his mind. "I don't want any of my friends to suffer the way I did in Kampala, so I tell them not to go to the city," he said.

 

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WHAT YOUR MONEY CAN BUY

$20 can provide 480 High Energy Protein Biscuits to provide children nutrition in the wake of a disaster.

$140 can provide a Basic Family Water Kit to provide clean drinking water to 10 families.

$256 can provide a School-in-a-box kit to set up a temporary school for 40 students during an emergency–containing a chalk board, notebooks, pencils, erasers, scissors and even multi-band radio.

 

 

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