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Let
them be children
Abel
Zimunya, Child Protection Society (CPS)
Extracted from the Child Advocate Newsletter, Issue No. 3
December 2003
The familiar
sound of the morning train bringing commuters to Harare woke up
Edith with a jolt. Instinctively she knew it was time to go to school,
or more precisely to bath, clothe and feed her seven year old brother
Tineyi, ready for school.
Tineyi reluctantly
woke up demanding better treatment from his sister, whom he has
come to dislike for being a bother. When the last of his parents
died Tineyi had been six years. Then there had been no school, no
child bathing in the morning and plenty of tea and sadza. Edith
had come to represent that change for him which brought hunger and
misery.
The day for
both children is a busy one, coping with school and coping with
the laughter from sibling rivalries about Tineyi's clothing. Edith
has better uniforms as she had already been in school when her mother
passed away. There has been little time for either Edith or Tineyi
to confide in their uncle, as he is always away with this errand
or that. He pays the rent and provides "everything" including
discipline. Time has been so short that even when the uncle's friend,
who now regularly visits the children, pinched fifteen year old
Edith's breasts during repeated visits, nothing has been seen as
amiss.
In the course
of the year Edith and Tineyi have been lucky to get a sponsor for
their school fees, uniforms and food baskets. Edith has been steadily
growing, her skin supple and lively to match a child of her age.
Tineyi has now become a bouncy high spirited child.
It is during
this time that Uncle Chari's friend becomes explicit with his intentions
and indeed one sad and tragic morning, when Tineyi had just skipped
off to school, that Uncle Chari's friend, the regular visitor, whom
the children have always called uncle, and sometimes looked upon
for comfort, accomplished his devastating mission, unprotected,
unheard, resigned and with tears all over her face, Edith faced
her fate.
For nearly half
a year the child dealt with the full symptoms of a sexually transmitted
infection without help, until a neighbour noticed the physical pain
and later the emotional anguish the child has been going through.
The process of reporting the offender to the police has been slow,
frightening and seemingly useless as Uncle Chari's friend unashamedly
assured everyone that he had been in love with Edith and he was
going to marry her as a second wife. He was only worried that since
Edith had a sexual infection, this could mean she was seeing other
men, not himself as even his wife could confirm he had no infection
or disease.
This story above
can sound fictitious, far-fetched and alarmist, yet in our work
with children, this is a very common and unseen problem, which has
affected the emotional, psychological, spiritual and physical development
of some children. This is particularly true for the girl child,
who many men enmeshed in sub-cultural values, tend to see as an
object of pleasure, disease cleansing (especially when still a virgin)
and a woman like many others who must come under masculine control.
Few ask if children like Edith have a right to be children or they
are condemned to a violent way into adulthood. There are many studies
to confirm these negative forces against children.
The biggest
problem in the lives of children like Edith, Tineyi and many other
vulnerable children has been the blinkered assistance that formalized
interventions for children have come to represent. Giving education
sponsorship, food and material assistance and token counselling
have been for a long time what child agencies working with vulnerable
children report to show for their noble work. Budget lines with
multi millions and even multi-billion dollar programs have been
the traditional proof that the child is in the centre.
Given the numbers
of children who are vulnerable, and the sociological effects of
urban poverty and the occurrence of deviance, there is need for
organizations and communities to heed the call for a closer look
at the child. If this is not done, aid to children can be ironical
in the sense that a healthy and radiant child is likely to be abused
most as compared to a child on the sick bed. Communities must be
given the leading role to cater for children as they will and should
prevent and detect the occurrence of abuse. Aid organizations should
come in as facilitators to a process of child rights based interventions
as opposed to needs based programs
It is often
the case that as the food assistance is given to communities, access
to food may endanger children and those who are vulnerable, as they
can be easily manipulated, exploited and abused often in silence.
Children are
not all about food and material. Children are about support, protection
and participation or empowerment. Children always have a story to
tell and let us put it first to know that in a situation where children
are so affected by poverty, HIV and AIDS, there is a story of agony,
sadness and abuse. Only when we assist them psychologically will
we be rewarded by a story ringing with laughter and creativity.
It's time to take the step beyond needs alone to rights and development.
Visit the Child
Protection Society fact
sheet
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