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There are 20,000 of these children in Honduras - 150 million around the world. They exist because so much of our world is a mess.
HONDURAS' STREETCHILDREN--"the numberless army of those without a voice."

HONDURAS' CHILD KILLINGS

By Fergal Keane, BBC News World Edition

Tegucigalpa, HONDURAS -- There are some 20,000 street children in the country.

More than a 1,000 children and young people have been murdered during the last four years in Honduras, according to a new UN report.

It also claims that the security forces are responsible for many of these killings, acting without fear of punishment. The UN urges the government in Tegucigalpa to take urgent action to prevent the summary executions and to bring those responsible to justice.

Cynthia Carolina. She tells me she is 17. But she cannot remember when she was born.

To me she looks 14, at a push 15. She has a two-year old-baby. I watch as she blows warm, moist breath into a plastic bag filled with glue.

Her breath blends with the fumes of the solvent and then she inhales deeply, sucking it all back into her chest.

In the minds of too many, street children equal crime equal social vermin... to be eradicated

A dreamy expression slips across the eyes of Cynthia Carolina. Then she lifts her jumper and rubs her stomach and tells us that she is pregnant again.

The glue is cheap and it delivers oblivion swiftly. It goes from the lungs swiftly into the bloodstream and on to the brain.

Cynthia is a citizen of Atomica Street. This narrow, grey thoroughfare in the middle of Tegucigalpa is her world, where her life happens.

She shares the doorways and street corner and whatever food she can beg with some other street children.

'Lost and broken'

A boy with a face covered in bloody scars says he is Cynthia's boyfriend and the father of her child. Which child, I ask. The two-year-old or the one she is expecting. But the boy is so far gone from glue that he is making little sense.

The conversation drifts off into a tumble of mismatched sentences. Just then a man - I guess he was in his 50s - walked by.

Cynthia immediately walked up to him. She caressed him. He took some money from his pocket and then, noticing that we were watching, put it back again. They walked to the end of the street, out of sight. But Cynthia reappeared soon after. Nothing had happened, she said.

The American writer William Styron once wrote of the "lost and broken children of the world." He meant, I think, those who lived in a world in which they were powerless, the numberless army of those without a voice.

There are 20,000 of these children in Honduras - 150 million around the world. They exist because so much of our world is a mess.

They live in countries where families cannot feed their young; where shacks are too small to house growing families; where natural disasters like hurricanes and earthquakes have driven hundreds of thousands from their homes; and where war and drought have reduced once prosperous nations to beggardom.

No outcry

In some Latin American countries, the police and vigilante groups have come up with their own solution to the problem of street children: shoot them, knife them, beat them to death. Disappear them.

I still struggle to understand how a policeman or vigilante makes the journey to pulling the trigger or wielding the knife that kills a child

In Honduras two boys are cycling through a park. As it happens they are not street children. But the policemen who abduct them don't believe this.

A few days later the boys' bodies are found. They have been savagely tortured. Their genitals have been cut off.

A few human rights groups make noise. But the streets are not filled with vast protesting crowds. There is no national uproar. No government falls. Honduras is not alone in this degree of indifference. In the minds of too many, street children equal crime equal social vermin... to be eradicated.

Some street children are involved in crime. I have been robbed by them in Nairobi. I watched them pull a knife on a colleague in Mongolia. I have been harassed and annoyed by them and wished they would vanish from my sight.

Getting tough on crime

Sitting at traffic lights I have averted my gaze from their outstretched hands. Go away. You frighten me. You make me feel guilty. What do you expect me to do about you? Which, of course, is how society responds.

But I still struggle to understand how a policeman or vigilante makes the journey to pulling the trigger or wielding the knife that kills a child.


Many babies are put into orphanages

I have heard it explained that in countries like Honduras and Brazil where the military and police have a long history of being able to do as they wish... that a culture of impunity also brutalises the police... add to that pressure from politicians and the public to get tough on crime... you end up with thousands of street children murdered.


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