Numbers of Street Children Growing in Northern Corner of Somalia

SOS has been running a Children's Village in Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, for decades. Local SOS Children's Villages staff have persisted in keeping the children under its care safe.
By: SOS Children's Villages - USA
 
March 10, 2010 - PRLog -- They shine shoes, wash cars, carry loads, clean homes. Unprotected at night, many of them are scarred by abuse and physical violence. Some have turned to drug abuse. They are malnourished. They suffer from TB and skin diseases.

These children -- some 5,000 of them -- have been forced to live or work on the streets of Bosasso, a port in northeastern Somalia that sits on the Gulf of Aden. According to the UN's IRIN news service, local government and child protection officials say that the ranks of such children are swelling.

These are the kinds of children that SOS Children's Villages seeks to protect through its nearly 500 villages in 132 countries. By offering orphaned and abandoned children a warm, clean home, a loving SOS mother, a full stomach, as well as an education and medical care, SOS brings hope to children who have none.

SOS Children's Villages in Somalia Since Early 1980s

SOS has been running a Children's Village in Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, for decades. Despite the intermittent forced closings and relocations that are characteristic of a region wracked by long-time civil war, local SOS Children's Villages staff have persisted in keeping the children under its care safe.

In today's Somalia, part of the increase in Bosasso's street children is tied to families' northern migration from south-central Somalia. During the journey to Bari, the region of Somalia that houses Bosasso, some children were separated from their parents. But an increasing number of street children are local, according to Muse Ghele, Bari's governor. The children who have homes to return to at night are doing odd jobs to help support their families, deeply impoverished by civil war, drought, and joblessness.

Helping Children and Mothers in Somalia

SOS-Mogadishu doesn't have the capacity to care for every Somalian child in need. But for decades it has provided essential services for children and mothers who would otherwise go entirely without education and medical attention. Its schools, maternity and gynecological hospital, pediatric hospital, and nurse training school are open to all, and have often been the only places to which local families can turn. No child should have to live on the streets. Help SOS Children's Villages help Somalia's vulnerable children. Sponsor disaster orphans today.

For more information:
http://www.sos-usa.org/newsroom/press-releases/Pages/Numb...

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About SOS Children's Villages
For 60 years, SOS Children's Villages has been dedicated to the long-term care of orphaned and abandoned children. With 500 villages in 132 countries, SOS offers a family-based village model that provides for the holistic needs of a child - family, community, education and support - essential for the successful transition from childhood into adulthood. Through Villages, schools, medical facilities, micro-lending, and family strengthening programs, SOS Children's Villages impacts the lives of over 1 million people each year. In 2009, SOS Children's Villages was honored with the Save the World Award. SOS is also the recipient of the Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize and the Mother Teresa Gold Medal.
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Source:SOS Children's Villages - USA
Email:***@sos-usa.org Email Verified
Zip:20036
Tags:Somalia, Bosasso, Sos Children S Villages, Street Children, Children, Poverty, Mogadishu
Industry:Non-profit, Society
Location:Washington - District of Columbia - United States
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