Tuesday, December 11, 2012

How streets children played hide and seek games with KCCA law enforcers


How streets children played hide and seek games with KCCA law enforcers
 Majority hide to avoid relocation
AL-MAHDI SSENKABIRWA
August 18 started as a normal day for Janet Okolo, 9 but it turned black when Police officers and city law enforcers rounded her up in the ongoing crackdown of street children.
The law enforcers supposedly mistook Okolo for a street kid despite her pleas that she is she a pupil of Tara Primary School, Kisugu, a city suburb.
This unlikely little girl had accompanied   her mother who vends food at Diamond Trust building veranda.
“Being a holiday I was assisting my mother and I explained this to the police officers but they couldn't listen. They also arrested my mum other too and I don’t know where she is now,” Okolo sobbed as she narrated her ordeal.
Interestingly, majority of the real street children avoided being rounded up as they engaged in a hide and seek game with law enforcers.
Mr Daniel Mujjukizi, the Kampala Capital City (KCCA) director gender, community service blames this on what he describes as ‘disgraceful Karimojong’ mothers who reportedly alerted the children to vacate their known hideouts in central Kampala and relocated to city suburbs. 
“Some Karimajong mothers and their leaders in Kisenyi are using the kids for their own benefits. When they knew that we are going to round them up, they alerted them and they disappeared from their known hideouts to unknown places,” Ms Mujjukiza said over the weekend.
He said Karimojong mothers in Kampala had a racket which was trafficking children from Karamoja to the city.
“We have so far prosecuted four Karimojong mothers for aiding kids to stay on the streets and more are going to be hunted.” Mujjukizi added
 But Ssemanda Ntanda, 13 wondered why he was rounded up yet he doesn’t hail from Karamoja.
“They have been saying they want only Karimajong .I am not one but I was arrested,” says Ssemanda who disappeared from his home in May after his father, Benjamin Ntanda reportedly chased him.
 Most of the street  kids sleep in the cloud on building verandas  and a few who save some coins through begging pay between Shs300 and Shs 500per night to get accommodation in makeshift lodges in Kisenyi and Katwe suburbs . The art of begging has of recent changed, with babies being used by their mothers and siblings to beg on their behalf, well aware that they will attract more sympathy from the public.
In the first operation carried out by Police and KCCA law enforcement officers , only 70 out of the estimated 5000 street kids were rounded up. First Lady Janet Museveni who also doubles as minister in charge of Karamoja is spearheading the campaign to remove all street kids off the streets.
The first lot of 70 kids including Okolo who were rounded up last Thursday night have already arrived at Masulita Children’s Village (MCV) run by Uganda Women’s Efforts to Save Ophans (Uweso) and will  serve as a transit centre for the children .
Ms Naomi Watiti, the chief executive officer Uweso says the kids will be screened and those from Karamoja will be relocated to Koblem Reception Centre .Those from other regions will be reunited with their families.
“Those from Karamoja will be resettled back home while those from the central and their parents cannot be traced will be enrolled in schools,” said Ms Watiti during the official launch of the launch of the street children project t in   Masulita recently .
“We are going to bring smiles on the faces of these kids and for the time we shall be with them we shall treat them as our own children.”  She said
Ms Museveni who presided as chief guest at the Masulita event reaffirmed her commitment to seek a lasting solution to the street children menace.
“These are seeds of Uganda which we must nurture to become useful in future,” she said
Ms Museveni said under the new arrangement, street kids will get all the assistance needed to grow up as good citizens.
“We have been taking these children to   Kampiringisa Rehabilitation Centre which is more of a prison than a home. This new place (MCV) is good I am optimistic that they will enjoy their stay here,” she said
During their three-month stay at Masuulita, the kids according to Ms Watiti , the executive director Uweso the kids will receive psycho-social support, simply literacy, treatment, involve them in games and educative films.
“We hope that after three months they could have changed their attitude and start seeing themselves as useful children,” she said during
Previously, the street children were forcefully bundled onto KCCA trucks and dumped at Kampiringisa Rehabilitation Centre in Mpigi District where they could escape in days due to deplorable conditions at the centre . It is believed that begging on the streets is big business as begging children can easily earn more than employed individuals and 80 percent of them, according to KCCA hail from the hunger and violence-prone Karamoja sub-region.
 Last week, KCCA began removing lunatics from the streets and hundreds of them are currently receiving psychiatric assistance at Butabika referral hospital and Kampiringisa Rehabilitation Centre in Mpigi district.
According to Dr Livingstone Makanga, KCCA director of medical services, over 100 lunatic people have been removed from the streets in the last couple of weeks .This followed complains from hotel owners and shop operators that lunatic people were scaring away their customers. A good number of lunatic people on the streets escape from Butabika Hospital while still on medication.
There are also reports that some lunatic men rape women at night. Street vendors who have for long been blocking walkways and pavements in down town Kampala are soon facing a similar fate following a presidential directive to relocate them to nearby permanent markets .This brings hope that the city will de-congested and become clean

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“When I thought I couldn’t go on, I forced myself to keep going .My success is based on persistence, not luck.”  Norman Lear 

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