Latin America has a large number of children who live and work on the streets
and this case is no different in the Dominican Republic. Considering that a
large number of nations in the region are labeled "developing nations," the
levels of poverty are extremely high, which push many out into the work force to
do whatever they can to make a few bucks. Poverty has no age limit and many
times young children, as young as 7 and 8 years old, can be found on the streets
peddling cheap goods, washing windows, shining shoes and in some cases doing
more extreme things like stealing or even drug running in order to make some
money. Though some steps have been taken by government officials and
non-governmental organizations to try and curve the number of children who work
on the streets, or make the streets their homes, there are still a high number
of children who don’t have any other option.
These children are vulnerable in the dangerous life of the streets and some will
find refuge in drugs, crime, or prostitution as a means to survive. As a means
of survival these children, especially with no other type of family structure,
build small networks among themselves, what some would call "families," as a way
to protect themselves against predators that try and take advantage of them. But
the predators are at times behind this situation. It is common practice that
some of these street children are exploited by persons who force the children to
work as beggars or street washers and vendors and then hand the money over to
them. At times even whole families are forced out on the streets to beg. In
other cases when a child does make some money he or she runs into the danger
that an older or stronger street child can take his money from him, making the
small gangs that they build even more important.
The headlines:
Though media outlets have written about the seriousness of the problems
regarding street children, there is barely enough information published that
gives full credence to the situation. Children’s organizations struggle to get
public and private funding and on the rare occasions that media outlets
highlight these children the information leaves much to the imagination. These
are the headlines, from 2007, regarding street laborers and street children that
appeared in Dominican newspapers. These headlines can give you a slight idea of
what these children go through though they fail to fully depict the problem.
Many children work in Southwest
Around 24% of school aged children in the southwest part of the DR are victims
of child labor according to statistics released by the Latin American Faculty
for Social Sciences (FLACSO). The study, done by Alicia Ziffrer, Miguel Escala,
Alexandra Santelises and Guillermo Milan, revealed that in the provinces of Azua,
Barahona, Independencia and San Juan de la Maguana 59.2% of homes have a monthly
income of RD$5,000.
(12 July 2007)
Minors at work in Santiago
A group of civic organizations have released a study on child labor in Santiago
and the results did not make for easy reading. The report was released at a
meeting between the Ministry of Labor, Accion Callejera (Street Action), the
municipality, the Association of Evangelical Pastors and the Women's Support
Nucleus where an agreement was signed in support of the World Day against Child
Labor. The final report says that 76,000 minors are at work in Santiago, and
most of them are either sexually exploited, work on farms or in domestic
settings. Nearly one thousand of them are reported to work as "divers"
scavenging at the Rafey garbage dump. According to the report put together by
the Center for Urban Studies of the PUCMM in Santiago, 450,000 minors are being
used for labor, sometimes in the worst way. Of these, 19% are in Santiago. Local
efforts include Accion Callejera and its programs at three different centers.
(13 June 2007)
DR on Watch List
The United States embassy released a report from the State Department yesterday
that placed the Dominican Republic on a "watch list" for human trafficking,
particularly of women and children. The press release says that the country "is
on the Observation List Category 2 for its inability to demonstrate evidence of
conscientious efforts to combat human trafficking, particularly in supplying
assistance to such victims and by not conducting vigorous actions to counter
official complicity in such trafficking." The report also points out that the
Dominican Republic is a country that originates, transfers and serves as a
destination for men, women and children destined for commercial sexual
exploitation and forced labor, and that women and children are taken from the
country to Western Europe, Australia, Argentina, Brazil, Costa Rica, the
Caribbean, Panama and Suriname for sexual exploitation. The document says that
the Dominican Republic does not comply with the minimum standards needed to put
an end to human trafficking. (13 June 2007)
World day against child labor
Today is international day against child labor and despite this being a big
problem in the Dominican Republic, Diario Libre writes that 47% of Dominicans
don't have the proper information on the issue. According to a report released
by the Labor Ministry and the PUCMM University, "Perceptions of Child Labor by
Dominican Society" there are 436,000 child workers in the DR and 43% of the
population say that they "tolerate and justify dignified child labor". In fact,
Hoy writes that only 5.8% of the population is against child labor. Part of the
study also indicates that 60% of Dominicans feel that children can work without
it interfering with their studies. Elias Dinzey, who presented the findings,
says that this perception needed to change. In all 2,200 people were interviewed
as part of the research and according to the findings, 15% believed that work
teaches children good values. (13 June 2007)
DR and malnutrition
The United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon has called child malnutrition
a "moral issue" and a "critical economic concern." Ban Ki-moon spoke at the
launch of the report "The Cost of Hunger: Economic and Social Impact of Child
Malnutrition in Central America and the Dominican Republic." The report was
prepared by the UN's World Food Program and the Economic Commission for Latin
America (ECLAC, or CEPAL in Spanish), and says that 14% of children in the
region suffer from malnutrition. The report says that this costs the region
US$6.7 billion or 6.4% of GDP. Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras were the most
critical countries, and the Dominican Republic was situated in the middle of the
group, below Panama, Costa Rica and Nicaragua. The study traces six decades of
nutritional history. The new study has found that child mal nutrition in Central
America and the Dominican Republic in 2004 alone cost those economies US$6.7
billion - or 6.4 percent of the region's entire Gross Domestic Product (GDP) - a
burden that severely undermines international and national efforts to eradicate
hunger and poverty.
"This study is a wake up call to the international community that widespread
child hunger is not only a moral and humanitarian issue, but has economic
consequences as well," said WFP Executive Director Josette Sheeran. See
http://www.eclac.org
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