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Street children report launched at the UN

Street children need greater protection and recognition if the Millennium Development Goals are to be achieved, say a new report being launched today at the United Nations.

The report commissioned by Plan International and the Consortium of Street Children (CSC) highlights the dangers and significant challenges street children face and how their rights have been ignored by governments and the international community.

StreetChild

Ten of millions of children live on the streets worldwide

The report is being launched at the 16th session of The Human Rights Council in Geneva, where a street involved child from Benin will share the stage with Marta Santos Pais, Special Representative of the UN Secretary General on Violence against Children, and call on governments to do more to protect rights for children like her.

 “Countries have to take the problems of street children seriously. We need protection, care and to be able to go to school. Free education should be available for all children and more especially for girls”, says Severine a 18-year old girl who was forced to live and work on the street in Benin.

The key role of birth registration

Plan's Head of Global Advocacy Nadya Kassam says: “Street children are some of the most excluded in our societies. Often without carers, they can be more vulnerable to exploitation and abuse – such as rape, kidnap, or being used for illegal and hazardous work.

But having a birth certificate means they have a legal identity, which makes them visible to the authorities who must take responsibility for providing education, health and protective services
”.

Call for action

Plan and CSC are calling for governments and the international community to:

  • Focus greater attention on marginalised children in order to achieve the MDG’s
  • Put in place and adequately fund national child protection and child welfare systems that are sensitive to the rights of street children
  • Recognise that the factors that lead to a children living or working on the street are complex and organisations working with street children need to tailor their responses
  • Provide appropriate gender and child rights training for all those who work with street children
Read the report Still on the street - Still short of rights

 

I don't have a birth certificate because my father used it, like any piece of paper, to roll a cigarette

Cameroonian child