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Monday, April 1, 2013

One child every five minutes runs away from home in the UK

 

 One infant in the UK running plays absent any louvre minutes according to charity the railway Children.

On Tuesday 19 run into 2013 Samantha Cameron hosted an compositor's case at 10 toss off Street in run of the Railway Children charity who produce with young run asides and driveway tykeren in the UK and internationally. Donna Navarro attended.

The charity works in collaboration with all over 26 partner organisations with 117 projects worldwide across Africa, Asia, and the UK.

Last year they helped 27,756 street children around the world.

In the UK, star child runs away every louvre minutes.

That’s an estimated 100,000 children under sixteen every year, running away or feeling forced to leave their homes because of poverty, violence, nuisance and neglect.

And of those, an tall(prenominal) 70 per cent will not be describe missing by their families.

That’s a staggering statistic for either p atomic number 18nt to read and it could happen to anyone.

As Terina Keene, the Chief Executive of the Railway Children said: “They [children and young plurality] run away or are forced to leave homes where they suffer poverty, violence, abuse and neglect.

“This is not something that clean happens abroad and in developing countries, it is a very actual issue here in the UK.”

The event at Downing Street was organised in conjunction with Mumsnet, the British parenting website and oppose forum, and Aviva who became involved with the charity through their own ‘street-to-school’ programme, to inform people about the exploitation and dangers children can encounter when running away.

The work of the Railway Children involves working with vulnerable children living alone and at risk on the streets.

The streets often feel like the that route of escape from the circumstances children are experiencing at home.

But, whilst it whitethorn seem like the only means of support open it’s also where they suffer abuse and exploitation.

If you were a child who felt it necessary to escape to the streets, you would reach out and labour the hand of a stranger if that stranger had a smiling and some food, wouldn’t you?

But what if that stranger went on to abuse you, or exploit you, what would you do? Who would you turn to?

Railway Children see early handling as crucial. Reaching a child before an abuser could save that child’s life.

Their work is about acquiring to children on the street before the street gets to them.

Railway Children and their partners meet children’s immediate needs.

They offer outreach support where workers identify and protect children as they arrive onto the streets and provide food, clothing, education and a safe side to stay.

The event at Downing Street was held to raise awareness. sentience is necessary to influence policy processrs to leverage government support for street children.

But also, without awareness parents have no real intellect of the dangers children encounter when living on the streets.

The Office of Children’s Commissioner mull prepared a report in November 2012 which identified 16,500 children who were at high risk of being intimately exploited in 2010-2011.

The report, titled “I thought I was the only one – the only one in the world”, sets out the findings from the maiden year of a two-year inquiry following the jailing in May 2012 of nine Asian men for grooming and sexually exploiting white girls as young as 13 in Rochdale, Greater Manchester.

Sue Berelowitz, deputy children’s commissioner, on the warning signs of abuse said: “The reality is that each year thousands of children in England are raped and abused by people seeking to humiliate, give and control them.

“These have included children who have been abducted, trafficked, beaten and jeopardise after being drawn into a web of sexual violence by promises of love, and others who have suffered in silence for age as they are casually and routinely raped by the boys in their neighbourhoods.”

These risks are often realities for the children and young people who run away from home.

Railway Children hold governments responsible and they lobby for change in policy to give tomorrow’s children a verificatory future.

To raise awareness, Samantha Cameron, Aviva, Mumsnet, the Railway Children and their partners are urging parents to fade with their children; to machinate them on the risks and the dangers of running away.

They are not asking you for money, they are simply asking you to lambast. Creating sustainable change for children takes time to achieve, provided communication is key.

For every comment left here and for every share on social media, Aviva will donate & nonplus;2.00 to Railway Children.

To learn more about the warning signs that you child might be thinking about running away and for support visit Mumsnet.

The message from the Downing Street event was very clear; it’s time to face reality.

Substance misuse, violence, sexual exploitation are very real issues here in the UK for runaway children.

It’s time to educate ourselves as parents and communicate with our children, the very real dangers children and young people face on the streets in the UK.

It’s time to rid the taboo and talk to our peers about children running away.

By acting today we can make a real difference to tomorrow.

 

 

 



Materials taken from Womens Views on News

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