---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: IRIN <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, 30 Aug 2011 12:47:56 -0000
Subject: KENYA: Hungry families send children out to beg
To: Jean-Francois Darcq <[email protected]>

KENYA: Hungry families send children out to beg

MARSABIT, 30 August 2011 (IRIN) - Derrick*, 12, has left home and now
lives on the dusty streets of northern Kenya's Marsabit town. His
parents - who live in a village several miles away - could no longer
afford to feed him, and he spends most days begging for food.

 "At home we don't eat every day. When I eat today, tomorrow there is
no food and we just sleep after drinking water - that is why I ran
away from home," he told IRIN. "Now I walk into places where people
eat and they give me food."

 As the drought continues to ravage many parts of Kenya and the cost
of living spirals beyond the means of many families, the sight of
children hanging around Marsabit has become more common. Some look for
casual labour, sweeping shop verandas and washing dishes at local
eateries, while others mill around the streets asking passers-by for
money or food.

 While the phenomenon of street children is not a unique one in Kenya
- according to the Ministry of Local Government, there are an
estimated 500,000 homeless people in the three largest towns of
Nairobi, Mombasa and Kisumu - smaller towns are seeing a spike in the
number of street children because of poverty and hunger. According to
records from the district children's services office, there were 2,500
street children in Marsabit at the end of May 2011, up from just 300
in same period in 2010.

 Aisha Mose, a mother of four, says she allows her children to go into
town to beg because she cannot afford to feed them. A 90kg bag of
maize, which in April 2011 cost about 2,500 shillings (US$27.10), now
costs as much as KSh4,800 ($52).

 "If I went [to town to beg], nobody would believe me, but people
easily sympathize with a child and they buy them food or give them
some money," she said. "That way they get something to eat for the
day, then they return home in the evening. Even if somebody just buys
them a banana, that is enough for the day."

 "Marsabit didn't have this high number of street children but as the
drought continues and the cost of living goes up and food prices go
north there has been an influx of them," said Fatuma Adan, coordinator
of the Horn of Africa Development Initiative, a Marsabit-based NGO.
"They can't get food at home so they come to the town to get food. Not
all children who have filled the streets come from rural families,
some have parents living here in the town but they are as hard hit as
those in the rural areas.

 "It is not just children coming into towns even though children are
many... Adults and especially women are equally getting to the streets
to beg for food," she added. "Actually, unless it is stemmed, crime
and prostitution will be commonplace here, yet these are situations
that were in the past associated with big cities."

 Adan noted that the situation made it difficult for the government
and organizations like hers to protect children from harm and ensure
they continued to attend school.

 Food distributions "rare"

 The government and aid agencies have been distributing food aid to
hungry families in northern and upper-eastern Kenya, and many of these
street children come from families that should benefit from such food
aid, but a government official, who preferred anonymity, said food
distribution exercises had been rare in the region.

 "Such children come from families that should ideally get food aid,
but this is an exercise that was last done - at least a coordinated
one - three months ago," he said. "The food given cannot last these
families, which are usually very large, for three months. Children
have to eat and being on the street provides an easier option."

 The Blanket Supplementary Feeding Programme being implemented in the
larger Marsabit region is limited to children younger than three, or
shorter than 95cm, all lactating mothers with children younger than
six months and expectant mothers.

 "It is a difficult situation, putting children at serious risk of
abuse; it increases cases of child labour and child prostitution,
which are a serious violation of children's rights," said Ahmed
Hussein, director of children's services at the Ministry of Gender.
"There are parents who have turned their children into full-time
beggars... [these children are] the new breadwinners."

 *Not his real name

 ko/kr/mw
[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93618



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