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From: PlusNews <[email protected]>
To: "Elisabeth Janaina" <[email protected]>
Date: Tuesday, May 8, 2012 9:08:12 AM GMT-0000
Subject: DRC: Reducing the HIV risk of girls living on the street

DRC: Reducing the HIV risk of girls living on the street 

KINSHASA, 8 May 2012 (PLUSNEWS) - Sarah, 16, started sleeping on the streets of 
Kinshasa, capital of the Democratic republic of Congo (DRC), when she was only 
eight years old. She doesn't remember how she came to live on the streets, but 
thinks it was soon after her mother died. 

Sarah is one of an estimated 20,000 children living rough on Kinshasa's 
streets, many from homes too poor to feed them, some after being thrown out of 
their homes because they were accused of sorcery, while others end up on the 
streets as a result of the divorce and remarriage of a parent whose new partner 
won't accept them. According to NGOs, about one-third of these children are 
girls, and around 80 percent of girls on the street make a living from sex. 

"Some men take you by force, and if you scream for help they beat you," Sarah 
told IRIN/PlusNews. "Younger girls can be taken advantage of and get only about 
US$1 for sex, but if you negotiate, you can get $10 for one whole night... 
sometimes you go to a hotel, sometimes you just find a dark place to do it." 

Sarah's face and arms are marked by scars from a fight with a group of girls 
who cut her with a razor. "When it's night you have to find somewhere to sleep. 
If it rains, your usual place may be flooded, and we're always running from the 
police," she said. "If you have no money and have to borrow some to eat, you 
will pay forever, because a debt on the street is never finished." 

Girls regularly experience violence, but help for street children, particularly 
girls, is very limited. A French NGO, Medecins du Monde (MDM), and their local 
partners, including the NGO, Aide à l'Enfance Défavorisée (AED) - Help for 
Disadvantaged Children - run a programme that seeks to protect girls up to the 
age of 21 living on the street from sexual and gender-based violence, unwanted 
pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections (STIs), including HIV. 

"Our partners have ambulances that go out on the streets and provide basic 
primary healthcare and referral for street children, and sexual and 
reproductive health services for girls, including contraceptives and condoms," 
said Pascale Barnich-Mungwa, country coordinator for MDM in DRC. 

With MDM reporting HIV prevalence among girls they have tested at 12-15 
percent, the provision of healthcare is crucial. "We teach them and help them 
with their drugs - ARV coverage is already difficult in the DRC, but now you 
have minors living on the street and at risk of theft of their drugs, which 
makes adherence tough," she said. 

AED also runs a drop-in centre where girls can access healthcare and take time 
to rest, as well as learn tailoring and other skills, and even music. 

"Activities like music help to build self-esteem. Many of these girls are raped 
as often as twice a week, so rape becomes the norm, and they survive by 
building a wall between themselves and their bodies. Activities like dance help 
them to take charge of their bodies again, somehow," said Barnich-Mungwa. Rape 
is one of the rituals girls go through when being initiated into sex work on 
the street, usually supervised by an older girl known as a 'yaya', or older 
sister, she said. 

MDM's main aim is risk-reduction, rather than reintegration of the girls into 
their families. Many girls run away from abusive homes, and families often want 
no more to do with children they sent away. "If we have girls below 12, 
reintegration may be possible if they've been on the streets for short periods, 
but once they have been raped and are already involved in sex work, it becomes 
much more difficult," Barnich-Mungwa said. 

"So at first, with our partners, we work to reduce the risks linked to their 
situation through education, user groups, etc. Once we've increased the risk 
awareness towards sexual behaviour and/or violence, we work at reducing it 
through contraception, condom use, and so on," she said. 

One organization that does aim at reintegrating girls with their families is 
War Child, which runs a similar programme in a different part of the city. "Our 
ambulances accept anyone on the street for first aid, provision of condoms and 
advice, but we specifically target girls aged 17 and under," said Michel 
Gratton, the War Child country director in DRC. 

"We invite them into the ambulance, where they talk to a counsellor one-on-one 
to see if they have any desire to return home. We try to convince them to come 
to our transit centre, where they have access to literacy classes, life skills 
and psychosocial services. If the girls are keen to return home, we start to 
look for their families and begin a process of medication, with regular 
follow-up of the girls who do go back home." 

Reintegration into families is rarely easy. "It's more difficult if the girls 
are pregnant, because not only has the girl's bride price value gone down, but 
the families have to pay for expensive healthcare, especially if they have to 
have a caesarean section [because they are very young]." 

There are a number of girls in the AED drop-in centre compound, known as Bomoyi 
Bwa Sika, meaning 'New Life' in the local Lingala language. Some look as young 
as 10, several are pregnant or carrying babies. The centre has a primary 
healthcare centre as well as a sexual and reproductive health centre where 
pregnant girls come for antenatal care. 

"We receive about 50 girls every day - today it's not even midday and we have 
received 53, and 14 slept here last night," said Mama Francoise Nzeza, the 
director of the centre. "When the police are patrolling and picking up girls, 
we can get up to 80 per day." 

Nzeza says she would love to see the girls off the street and out of sex work, 
but they do not have the funds to offer them alternative accommodation and 
income-generating activities, and reintegration is often impossible. "We can't 
tell them to stop sex work because we can't give them an alternative - what we 
can do is give them condoms and contraception to prevent disease and unwanted 
pregnancy, but we can't judge or moralize about their situation." 

One of the drop-in centre's key challenges is changing social behaviour. "Many 
of the girls on the street are violent - the streets make them hard and 
aggressive. We try to socialise them, so that if they get the chance they can 
live in mainstream society," Nzeza said. 

Reducing the number of children who end up on Kinshasa's streets must be a 
society-wide effort. "It must involve a reduction in poverty and joblessness, 
so that parents can look after their children. It must involve conversations 
with churches, many of which are involved in these accusations of sorcery. It 
must involve sensitizing parents about their responsibility to their children, 
even after divorce," she said. "In addition, we must insist that the laws to 
protect children are implemented." 

kr/he 
[END]

This report online: http://www.plusnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=95427



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