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Posts Tagged ‘children’

Life is tough for the broken kids of Long Street

Posted by mattmedved on September 16, 2007

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By MATT MEDVEDpage_7967783

Weaving through the gaps in the constant stream of tourists that walk down Long Street, Lwando “Popeye” Nwalpo is on autopilot.

With 10 of his 17 years spent scrounging on the Cape Town streets, Nwalpo has the routine down to an art form. His frame, small for his age, is draped in a ragged beige coat from which his large smile protrudes. He flags down a passing couple with a thumbs-up gesture and a checkerboard grin. A brief chat rewards him with a R2 coin.

“When approaching people, I usually start with geography,” says Nwalpo.

“I ask, ‘where are you from?’ I try to be honest.”

Nwalpo says he learned the approach from other children and adults he met on the streets. He had to learn quickly after travelling cross-country from Soweto in 1997 with his mother, drawn by the promise of a job and a place to stay with a family friend.

But the promise fell through. Nwalpo’s mother began working as a parking guard on Kloof Street, the intersecting avenue with Long that has become both where the family works and sleeps. Nwalpo says they have been saving for bus fare back to Johannesburg since a cardboard box became their bed.

“Too old,” says Nwalpo when asked his mother’s age. “She relies on me now.”

On an average day, Nwalpo wakes up between 10am and noon and roams the street begging until midnight, though he stays out later on weekends.

He says the nights are the most lucrative because of the active nightlife, and on a good night he will take in as much as R80. But nights vary, and on this particular night he claims he has only been able to wangle the R2 from the couple earlier.

He usually confines his activities to Long Street and its immediate area because other areas are governed by unwritten turf rules.

“Long Street is anyone’s game,” he says.

“But in other areas I have been threatened by street kid gangs. I don’t want any trouble, I don’t fight.”

Besides rival factions, Long Street children must also brave freeloading security guards. Nwalpo says many demand “taxes” of R2 or R4 and threaten to kick them off the streets if they do not comply.

“I don’t pay the security guards, though a lot of the other kids do,” says Nwalpo, glaring at the guard by the door of the Long Street Superette.

“I work hard for my money.”

The Long Street security guards have a different take on their interactions with the street children.

“We are supposed to chase them away but it’s hard to do it every day,” says a security guard who has been assigned to Long Street for two months.

“We usually just let them do what they do.”

He says sometimes preventing street children from pestering pedestrians for “small change” is in their best interests.

“Sometimes they hassle the passers-by and people don’t like it,” he says.

“They are going to get hurt if they keep doing it. By chasing them off, we’re protecting them.”

He also denies ever taking money from the children and glares at Nwalpo, who remains silent.

As we leave the superette, a snaggletooth man with a scarred face approaches us and tries to hustle me for money.

When I refuse, he kicks at my feet and curses at Nwalpo, who tries to duck behind me.

Nwalpo is shaking as the man turns back up the street.

“That man tried to fight me once, but I refused and he bit me,” says Nwalpo, showing me a scar on his left index finger.

“He does tik and he is always trying to get money from the kids on the street, though he hasn’t been here long.”

Nwalpo says he has never engaged in drug use, but that “many kids” do. He points towards the crumpled figure of a boy lying on a corner clutching a plastic bag. “He is doing glue,” Nwalpo says.

“It is common on the streets. I see others doing drugs but I’ve never tried.”

Patric Solomons, the director of child rights organisation Molo Songololo, says “a large percentage” of street children are substance abusers.

“On some level they create the illusion they are providing protection for the children, but they are usually manipulating them. Gangs will also often try and recruit them to push or courier drugs or to carry out thefts and break-ins for them.”

Solomons confirmed that street children often organise themselves in their own gangs and compete with other street children for panhandling turf.

“Street children also experience quite severe levels of violence – both by police officers and security companies who are trying to the keep the city clean.”

Solomons says when street children begin to outgrow their cuteness and handouts decline, they often turn to crime. Lacking education and vocational skills, crime becomes their only means of income. Prostitution is a common business for homeless females, while males frequently find themselves in gangs and drug rings.

Dylan Okkers, a 25-year-old parking guard, found this doomsday forecast to be all too true.

Okkers fled his Elsies River home at age 15 after getting sucked into a gang war raging between the Dixie Boys and Americans.

“I had become a small gangster for the Dixie Boys, stabbing and shooting at Americans,” Okkers says.

“It was much better on the streets; I no longer had to carry a gun.”

Fending for himself on the CBD streets, Okkers began sniffing glue and performing services for members of the notorious 28s prison gang.

“They were using us to beg and rob for them, we’d meet them on the street corner and they would tell us what to do,” Okkers says.

“They didn’t give us anything in return. They would beat us up if we refused.”

Okkers was arrested for stealing a woman’s bag and sentenced to three-and-a-half years, which he served in Pollsmoor, Victor Verster and Helderstroom prisons. While inside, Okkers became heavily involved in gang activity and rose through the ranks of the 28s.

Since his release, Okkers has tried to put his gangster past behind him

“I don’t ever want to go back to prison, so I’m using my brain to get by now by parking cars,” Okkers says, fingering the XXVIII tattoo on his wrist.

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Mother City the most dangerous for children in South Africa

Posted by mattmedved on July 18, 2007

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By Matt Medved

Cape Town is the most dangerous city in South Africa for children to live in, according to a recent research study.

The results showed 200 violent deaths of children for every 100 000 city residents.
“In Cape Town, the number of violent deaths of children is very much weighted by the number of deaths of adolescents,” said Childline national co-ordinator Joan van Nieker

“One wonders if it is not gang activity that helps account for the extremely high numbers.”

The study, which tracked violent deaths of children up to age 18, was based on 2006 research by Professor Sebastian van As, head of the Red Cross Children’s Hospital Trauma Unit.

The results found Durban to be the second most dangerous city with 127 deaths per 100 000 people, followed by Johannesburg with 64.

“Johannesburg led the country in infant deaths and there is a severe abandonment problem there,” said Van Niekerk .

“But it’s quite interesting, because we all think of Johannesburg as being the most dangerous city for children, but obviously not, it’s Cape Town.”

Van Niekerk said the study had focused on major urban areas because figures from rural areas were “often deflated because of under-reporting”.

“Traditionally Cape Town has always been very violent compared to other cities,” said Van As.

“And there is a lot of violence against children, especially in the township areas.”

Van As said gangs played a significant role in the high violent crime statistics regarding children in the Western Cape.

“Data from UCT suggests that there are 18 000 gang members in the Western Cape, and it is also suspected that there are probably 100 000 people whose income is dependent on gangs,” said Van As.

“It’s certainly not an easy problem to be solved.”

The 2004-2005 statistics show the Western Cape leading the country in indecent assaults against children. And Western Cape experts agree that the number of violent and sexual crimes against children has been growing every year.

DA spokesperson on child abuse Mike Waters said: “It’s a combination of a number of things. People are reporting these crimes more, indicating a vote of confidence in the system. But unfortunately, there are more children being raped and killed each year as well.”

Molo Songololo director Patric Solomons said the Western Cape’s support systems and campaigns against violence may have inflated statistics due to a higher level of crime reporting.

“However I do feel the incidence of crimes against children is far too high across the country,” said Solomons.

Solomons said the Western Cape had specific causal factors that contributed to violence against children.

“Definitely, we have a high presence of gangs and crime networks that recruit teenagers for illegal activities. But social crimes such as alcohol abuse contribute as well. We’ve already seen where unsuspecting victims have been drugged or given alcohol. These kind of conditions further fuel the vulnerability of children.”

The headlines have reflected the crisis.

On July 2, the body of Sonja Brown, 2, was found in a drain in Rawsonville. On June 23, the body of Mikayla Roussouw, 6, was found in a box under a neighbour’s bed in a Swellendam shack.

And earlier in 2007 the body of Annestacia Wiese, 11, was found in the ceiling of her mother’s home in Mitchell’s Plain.

    • This article was originally published on page 5 of Cape Argus on July 18, 2007

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One-year-old among drunk kids at shelter

Posted by mattmedved on July 12, 2007

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By MATT MEDVED and CANDICE BAILEYpage_7242505

Eight-year-old Candice Kasper is only one of a number of intoxicated children to have been taken in by community worker Maliga Naidoo, who says she rescued a year-old drunk baby at Christmas.

Candice was found at the centre yesterday after going missing from her home on Saturday.

Naidoo’s Cravenby Community Care Centre in Ravensmead, which she has been running for nine years, receives an average of 18 to 19 intoxicated pre-teen children every holiday season.

“The Christmas season is the worst,” said Naidoo. “When everyone is busy with parties, all sorts of drunken children are brought here. It is always the parents who have given them the alcohol.”

Naidoo provides accommodation to 48 mothers and children who have been abused, abandoned or are HIV-positive.

At Christmas, she said, a friend had asked her to go to an Uitsig house where she found a year-old baby lying by the door. She took the girl, who was vomiting and suffering from diarrhoea, to hospital where she was found to be intoxicated.

“What kind of adult can do that to their child?” said Naidoo.

“Social services gave her back to the mother a week later. The father called me and told me she was at a shebeen.”

Naidoo confronted the mother with the child protection unit in tow but the woman escaped.

“We are desperately trying to do the work that police, parents and other social workers are not doing to save these children,” said Naidoo.

Meanwhile, a survey shows that in the Western Cape almost 20% of children start drinking before they are 13.

And by the time they reach Grade 11, more than 60% regularly drink alcohol. These shock figures are drawn from the SA National Youth Risk Behaviour Survey, conducted in schools in 2002.

Nationally, about 40% of children aged 13 or under have had alcohol, with about 16% of them saying they indulged in binge drinking of more than five drinks at once.

Although the survey is based on research from five years ago, experts believe current figures are more than likely to be similar. For the survey, 10 699 high school children between the ages of 11 and 20 were interviewed.

Dr Neo Morojele, deputy director of the Medical Research Council’s Alcohol and Drug Abuse research unit, said the statistics were “probably the same or maybe even higher” by now.

Sarah Fisher of Substance Misuse: Advocacy, Research and Training said the phenomenon of underage drinking was not only happening in communities were socio-economic problems were rife.

She said drinking had be-come “acceptable” in society.

“Many parents buy their underage children coolers, thinking that the beverages are not alcoholic. Coolers and ciders have also become aimed at younger people.”

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