The issue of street children is a very
popular trend in most emerging cities in the world. This is particularly
so in developing countries, where the fabric of communalism found in
traditional societies are almost faded. They are replaced by
individualism which no longer prioritises and recognises child welfare
as part of the society’s key responsibilities. This problem, also adds
to the problem of inadequate social welfare structures by the state and
immense existence of poverty rate that has varying high degrees in
different regions. Therefore, it is easy to see children, teens and
young adults engage in different menial jobs fighting for survival –
like an average adult, on the streets. Some have parents or guardians,
who are only nominally active in the child’s or teen’s life without
taking welfare responsibility; others are orphans or products of
mentally deficient parents who are unable to take care of them.
Cities are equally known to be sources
of life changing opportunities. This is mostly due to the interplay of
social, entrepreneurial and government development drives. These are
used to induce high rate of geographical mobility leading to population
and investment growth and generally, expand the economy of such regions;
so who will really blame them as they troop into the cities in large
numbers, like hustlers, trying to seek their own life-changing
opportunities in different strategic positions of the cities.
Uyo is one of such emerging cities in
Nigeria – capital to the coastal Akwa Ibom State in the Niger-Delta
region of the country. With large deposits of crude oil in export
quantity, the state was already on the watch-out list for speedy
development, and the continuum of development policies of previous state
leaders that saw the erection of strategic infrastructures which were
effectively played to the gallery of the media, these brought about a
sort of population surge which equally attracted the so-called dredges
of the society to the state, vis-à-vis the capital cum city.
At the epicentre of the city, Ibom
Plaza, which octopuses into strategic roads leading to different parts
of the city, one can easily notice a high population of children, teens,
young adults, disabled, young mothers, aged and other vulnerable groups
who engage in begging, petty businesses and services, or generally,
“hustling” in the day. At night, any available space within the plaza,
region becomes their bed. For 365 days, this is the living-cycle of some
of them who cannot trace their homes, internally-displaced as a result
of Boko Haram or just forgotten by relations and other care-givers. One
of the major roads, Oron road, that diffused out of Nwaniba road,
leading to Ibom plaza, equally seems to be a hotspot for the activities
of street children/teens. From the morning that ushered in the bright
sunshine to the mild sunset of the evening, at many traffic lights of
the long Oron road, one can easily see group(s) of older children and
teens, mostly boys, who are wielding foams and small bottles of soapy
water, waiting for the STOP sign of the traffic light to show before
starting frenzy windscreen clean-ups for as much cars as possible and
waiting on the benevolence of car owners to drop change into their
waiting lean palms before the light goes green. Specifically, the
two-lane traffic light intersection of the Oron road seems to hold much
promise for them probably as a result of multiplicity of routes there
which present wider opportunity to engage with many motorists at the
same time. The Maitama area of Ewet Housing Estate equally interests
them.
The five months I have lived in the city
made me to ask questions in different quarters. What are the state
government’s plans for the social inclusion of these streetchildren into
the affairs of the state? Is the government not keen to recognize the
surge of these street children and teens as a social problem that needs
utmost attention? Are the officials blind to notice that the relative
peace the city enjoys, compared to other cities in Nigeria, will soon be
a mirage in the next few years as these children and teens get older
because of their vulnerable statuses, as so can easily be drafted into
social ills by the expanding population? What about the Child Rights Act
which I believe the state organs adopted? And why is everyone feeling
unconcerned about them? Who are the urbanites really waiting for before
taking up this challenge? Are they not seeing the danger of continuously
excluding this group against access to social amenities which will
improve their human capacity and channel them into the proper route of
fending for themselves?
Experts agree that the issue of “street
children” is a multi-faceted problem that stems from failures from the
cultural, socio-economic, family system, traditional community welfare
system, absence of proper social welfare scheme from government etc.
This singular reason makes it impossible for government to tackle alone.
No government can effectively tackle this without the input of
different social actors of the citizenry. But where both the government
and citizens are not bothered about them, there is an impending danger
to the very society.
Footsteps of Hold My Hand Foundation, Uyo
Before my posting to the city earlier this year, I got connected to a young man, Benjamin Omin Itu, an ex-streetchild, who runs an NGO, Hold My Hand Foundation in Uyo and Abak, that tries to keep street children from harm by providing welfare benefits to them in terms of food, temporal shelter, retracing, security, restitution process and clothing courtesy of his savings and that of friends. We connected on Facebook and he equally attended the #streetkidsread, a literacy building event I convened for street children of Port Harcourt, under my NGO, Nwuliareads Initiative in partnership with Portharcourt Global Shapers Hub, for the celebration of the 2016 International Day for Street children in April.
Before my posting to the city earlier this year, I got connected to a young man, Benjamin Omin Itu, an ex-streetchild, who runs an NGO, Hold My Hand Foundation in Uyo and Abak, that tries to keep street children from harm by providing welfare benefits to them in terms of food, temporal shelter, retracing, security, restitution process and clothing courtesy of his savings and that of friends. We connected on Facebook and he equally attended the #streetkidsread, a literacy building event I convened for street children of Port Harcourt, under my NGO, Nwuliareads Initiative in partnership with Portharcourt Global Shapers Hub, for the celebration of the 2016 International Day for Street children in April.
His passion via his Facebook posts later
captured me and still got me when I arrived Uyo which led me to the
Foundation’s Abak residence on 28th August, 2016. I met six male street
teens, in a room, laughing at the pranks they play with each other. The
sheer new joy that lighted on their faces that a new face, visitor, came
to visit them. Thereafter, tales of their pains and victories began.
He does not keep all the street children
that identify with the foundation with him. Staying at the Foundation’s
house is by choice. They are mostly orphans, little cared-for kids,
children from mad women. Being assaulted, violated and raped are daily
occurrence before they came to him because they were even sometimes seen
as witches. I saw the darker scars on some of their bodies, some are
still in the healing process. Sometimes, at the public place they slept
at, some are kidnapped for rituals. No one will ever see them or even
ask of them. They were peculiar cases too. There was Joseph, a street
teen who got lucky and was adopted by a couple in Abak; he now goes to
school, already in Secondary School. He is deemed like a god among
others. Victor; he stole rolls of satchet milk from a provision shop and
was nearly lynched; Benjamin was called and he rescued him and later
began the restitution process. Victor paid back what he stole from the
shop through working for the owner of the shop for a period of time.
Today, Victor still works in the shop
and he is paid and even fed by the shop owner. The owner trusts him with
his goods and money and this singular action has made him to become a
better person who now abhors stealing and appreciates being hardworking.
The noticeable changes seen among the street teens and children of Hold
My Hand are that their sense of self-worth and value system is
changing. Now, they yearn for school and feel ashamed when they see
their mates on school uniforms when they go roaming the streets. Then
the street children of Maitama, Ewet Housing Estate. Those ones run
errands for the prostitutes that line up on that street and they are
paid by being sexually touched. At this news, my jaw dropped. But these
are regular tales in their lives.
One must commend these little footsteps that Hold my Hand
takes and hope that more individuals, organizations, NGOs, and various
government organs will do something substantially to improve their
capacity by either giving them literacy education (going to schools) or
expose them to one of the life-changing skills which will add more
meaning to their lives. But before anything, their thinking pattern and
sense of self-value and belonging need to be worked on.
Source: BellaNaija
