June 21, 2004
Iraq: New NGO Helps Street Children In Baghdad
by Valentinas Mite
Broken families? A father and son looting in Iraq (file photo)
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Thousands of homeless children are living on the streets of the Iraqi capital Baghdad. They are begging, stealing, selling, or using drugs, rooting through garbage for food, and sleeping on the pavement. Some of them have been living this way for just days, but others have been on the street for more than a year since leaving state-run orphanages after the collapse of the regime. RFE/RL correspondent Valentinas Mite is in Baghdad and reports the problem is causing mounting concern among new Iraqi NGOs.
Baghdad, 21 June 2004 (RFE/RL) -- It is a cry every foreigner in the Iraqi capital hears every day: "Mister, mister, give me money."
The beggars are children, some as young as five years old. In dirty clothes and unwashed faces, they sell chewing gum or polish shoes or simply ask for money. They speak and swear like adults, and are seemingly afraid of no one.
No one knows how many homeless children there are in Baghdad. They seem to be everywhere, especially in central neighborhoods where foreigners are known to live, near the Sheraton and Palestine hotels.
Iraq's street children are causing concern not only among Muslim religious groups as well as international and Iraqi nongovernmental organizations (NGOs).
Asmaa Rasheed, a Sunni Arab, is a program manager for the Kurdistan Save the Children Fund (KSC), an NGO that has been operating in northern Iraq since 1991.
The organization opened a Baghdad branch a year ago, just after the fall of Saddam Hussein. It opened a shelter for street children in the Iraqi capital in November.