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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!daemon
- From: Christic Institute <christic@igc.apc.org>
- Subject: Children and human rights
- Message-ID: <1992Sep12.103838.13385@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: daemon@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: ?
- Date: Sat, 12 Sep 1992 10:38:38 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 128
-
- /* Written 9:21 am Sep 11, 1992 by codehuca in cdp:carnet.alerts */
- /* ---------- "Children and human rights" ---------- */
-
- Streetchildren - a growing problem
-
- According to UNICEF (United Nations International Children's
- Emergency Fund) figures there are some 10,000 children between 4
- and 18 years old who daily wander the streets of Guatemala City.
- Some work on the street shining shoes, selling flowers,
- cigarettes, etc; others simply survive - malnourished, sniffing
- glue, looking for food among the garbage, sleeping under parked
- cars or on the pavement. Many survive by petty theft, begging and
- prostitution, exposing themselves to all kinds of abuses and
- dangers.
-
- This already would be enough to say it is an alarming situation,
- but there is more and more information available concerning
- harrassment, threats, beatings, torture, and even disappearances
- and extrajudicial executions of streetchildren. This is their
- daily reality.
-
- In Guatemala, some streetchildren were displaced by the
- counterinsurgency campaigns carried out by the army during the
- early eighties. The violent character of these campaigns resulted
- in children being separated from parents and home. Some street-
- children were abandoned. Others are from broken and defeated
- families, due in large part to displacements and economic
- reasons, as some 80% of the population live in poverty.
-
- The streetchildren grow up outside of any semblance of a family
- situation. The circumstances -violence and systemic poverty-
- force them to the streets where they have to find a way to
- survive, by themselves or in small groups.
-
- Their presence is provoking negative and violent reactions
- against them from certain sectors of the society. Streetchildren
- are accustomed to neglect and destain. They grow up believing
- nobody wants them. They develope little self-respect. Their only
- reference is the street, the street where they have to conquer a
- position within the ruling social hierachy and where they learn
- that, when you are good and cunning, crime does pay.
-
- Children, in general, in Guatemala have few opportunities to
- receive any proper up-bringing or education. The possibilities
- are even less for streetchildren. Although there are
- organizations that work with children, it is difficult to offer a
- real alternative in an unjust society like Guatemala - these
- organizations cannot hope to address the needs of all the
- children.
-
- Some children's organizations focus their work only on street-
- children. Workers walk the streets and market places to get in
- touch with and try to give some education to the children,
- especially literacy classes. As some children, though they work
- and live on the streets, maintain contact with their families,
- the objective of these organizations is to offer, through
- education, some sort of alternative to keep them from only living
- on the streets.
- Casa Alianza is the organization with most experience in this
- area. They have ten years experience working with streetchildren,
- trying to get them off the street. But once the children are used
- to living on the street, it is hard to change or transform that,
- particularly given the limited options that Casa Alianza can
- really offer.
-
- When one considers from where most of the children come -
- displaced from war zones, or from broken families living in
- conditions of poverty- streetlife offers, as the children see it,
- possibilities\ alternatives, if one is cunning in crime.
-
- Even so, what Casa Alianza offers is better than the government
- programs. The Department of Social Welfare does have
- rehabilitation centers, but they are more like prisons where the
- children end up being victims of physical and sexual abuse.
- Neither do these centers have the infrastructure nor trained
- personnel to deal with the breadth of the situation of the
- streetchildren.
-
- Human rights violations - the number of violations against these
- children grew by 56% in 1991 (compared to 1990) and the fear is
- that 1992 (looking at the figures for the first 6 months) will be
- worse. The violence against streetchildren is making the
- situation even more alarming and complicated. The perpetrators of
- these violations are often police, sometimes in uniform,
- sometimes dressed in civilian clothes. There are also cases known
- that those responsible are members of private security companies
- that operate with a licence from the National Police and the
- Ministery of Internal Affairs.
-
- These abuses are not a new phenomena. But it is only recently
- that humanitarian and human rights organizations started
- denouncing the violations and putting pressure on the government
- to investigate the crimes and violations. It is very hard to get
- those responsible convicted - impunity is a well known phenomena
- in Guatemala.
-
- Casa Alianza for instance has a legal department that right now
- has some 40 cases against agents of the National Police,
- allegedly responsible for numerous cases of violence committed
- against street children.
-
- "What we can say is that through our work the government at
- least recognizes that there is a 'problem group' in this
- country - the streetchildren", said the director of this
- organization. "If there weren't a program like ours, the
- problem simply would 'not exist' for the authorities. In
- Guatemala there are so many problems with serious human
- rights violations - of the indigenous population, women,
- opposition parties and organizations - that a problem of
- some thousands of children, whose basic rights are violated,
- daily, publicly and openly in the streets of the City,
- really this is a minor problem for the government, alomost
- invisible." (translated)
-
- Casa Alianza not only supports these children, but they decided
- also to pressure the government to change the roots of the
- problem - ending the political and civil violence and bringing
- about structural changes to the terribly unjust economic and
- social order.
- Structural changes are necessary to erradicate poverty,
- displacement and the disintegration of families, that will better
- health care and the education system, to name just a few of the
- country's problems. In our opinion improving the situation of
- children's rights in Guatemala also demands that we work on these
- underlying causes at the same time.
-
- Contact- Marjoleine and Grahame
-
-