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Uganda Bans Giving To Child Beggars In Bid To Stop Exploitation - Foreign Affairs - Nairaland

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Uganda Bans Giving To Child Beggars In Bid To Stop Exploitation by Nobody: 7:09pm On Jun 05, 2019
Kampala officials say law aims to protect children and keep them off the streets but activists fear exploiters will develop new tactics

Ugandan officials have passed a law making it an offence to offer money, food or clothing to children living on the streets of the capital, in a controversial bid to stop exploitation and sexual abuse.

The Kampala Child Protection Ordinance 2019 also criminalises children loitering in public places, begging or soliciting, vending or hawking, and bans the sale of alcohol and drugs to children.

Kampala’s deputy Lord Mayor, Sarah Kanyike, said the law would control the influx of street children and encourage voluntary initiatives to help them leave the streets.

“All along we have had no law governing these children. This bill provides for protection of children against certain forms of exploitation and sexual abuse. We have put [in place] penalties for the offenders,” Kanyike said.

Offenders face up to six months’ imprisonment or a fine of 40,000 Ugandan shillings (£9), or both.

At least 10,000 to 15,000 children, mainly from the semi-arid north-east Karamoja region, live on the streets in Kampala, according to government estimates.

“We have nowhere to go. It’s through begging that we earn a living,” said 14-year-old Esther. “We are not scared and [we are] ready to face the [legal] consequences.”

The law is “firefighting”, warned Ariong Moses, president of the Global Health Corps Fellowship Alumni Association of Uganda, as it doesn’t address the origins of the problem.

“We are running away from addressing the root causes that have brought so many children to the streets, instead opting to punish those who try to help them. Those kids need help, not isolation and segregation,” Moses said.

Other activists have welcomed the new legislation as a way to prevent people from seeking to exploit youngsters.

“We believe that this law, if well implemented, will help us in reducing the pull factors and making the streets as difficult as possible, particularly for the exploiters,” said Faith Atwine, deputy director communications, strategy and impact at Dwelling Places, Uganda.

“We believe [the law] will go a long way in reducing the magnitude of the problem. Children will not come to the streets to beg if they are receiving nothing from the streets,” she said.

However, she cautioned: “We have to stay alert and watch out for any new ideas that these exploiters might come up with, so that we are able to act immediately to ensure children are protected from exploitation by selfish people out there.”

Lack of jobs, neglect, parents’ failure to adequately provide for children’s needs and high poverty rates are among the factors that drive children to a life on the streets.

Some eight million or 21.4% of Ugandans are living in poverty, according to the revised National Household Survey report published in January 2018.




https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2019/jun/04/uganda-bans-giving-to-child-beggars-bid-stop-exploitation

Re: Uganda Bans Giving To Child Beggars In Bid To Stop Exploitation by Andersonjr(m): 7:15pm On Jun 05, 2019
Wow good move. Unlike my country here...
Re: Uganda Bans Giving To Child Beggars In Bid To Stop Exploitation by simonlee(m): 7:22pm On Jun 05, 2019
Andersonjr:
Wow good move. Unlike my country here...
Try dis in north...

1 Like

Re: Uganda Bans Giving To Child Beggars In Bid To Stop Exploitation by simonlee(m): 7:23pm On Jun 05, 2019
Meanwhile... northerners and Almajiri are 5 & 6

Re: Uganda Bans Giving To Child Beggars In Bid To Stop Exploitation by Princevirus(m): 7:26pm On Jun 05, 2019
Nigeria cannot try that otherwise more than half of the population of the North will starve to death.

1 Like

Re: Uganda Bans Giving To Child Beggars In Bid To Stop Exploitation by delugajackson: 7:46pm On Jun 05, 2019
Africans just take pleasure in birthing children like rats. One of the main causes of wide-spread poverty in Africa is population explosion.

That is why Northern Nigeria is still impoverished to this very day, coupled with their illiteracy, backwardness and crazy religion that allows them take more than one wife. They give birth to many children without taking responsibility, which in turn results to a large number of destitudes, street urchins, criminal elements and Almajiri that flood the streets begging for alms. The North is a complete mess.

4 Likes

Re: Uganda Bans Giving To Child Beggars In Bid To Stop Exploitation by panafrican(m): 10:51pm On Jun 05, 2019
Senegal should do the same thing. In that country
Children going to quranic schools are taught to beg and many are being exploited by Imams.
Re: Uganda Bans Giving To Child Beggars In Bid To Stop Exploitation by daroz(m): 4:31am On Jun 06, 2019
Isinweke:
K

At least 10,000 to 15,000 children, mainly from the north east....


https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2019/jun/04/uganda-bans-giving-to-child-beggars-bid-stop-exploitation


Everywhere in the world , the north has always been the problem.

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