By: Fr. Shay Cullen
here has been progress in
saving and releasing hundreds of small children and youth from the
stench filled cells across the Philippines. President Macapagal-Arroyo
ordered last 16 July 2007 that all children be released from the
prisons, police jails and
so-called
reception centers, a euphemism for child prisons. The Preda children's
home in Olongapo is almost full but ready to receive more children and
is building a new home for some of those to be released. Cradle a child
prison in Metro Manila is to be closed. The president heard the cries of
the children echoed by the charities helping them survive.
This happened after a concerted lobbying by many concerned charities
including Preda Foundation in Olongapo city. Other prisons called, youth
reception or rehabilitation centers, are really prisons. They too must
be closed and the children returned to their parents or those abandoned
or homeless given true homes and care.
There could yet be an estimated 20,000 waiting for freedom. The new
Juvenile Justice and Welfare law says they must be released, the
presidential executive order 633 made only this July, says it must be
implemented without delay but bureaucracy is moribund and there is no
ready homes for the many children behind bars.
Many have no parents and authorities have been unable to or unwilling to
look for those that have parents. More children's homes are needed
desperately for these abandoned and neglected children. The President no
matter how well intentioned in ordering the release has to address the
immediate and long term needs of these Throwaway Children. Where will
they go? Back to the streets to be taken up by criminal gangs,
trafficked into the sex industry and become domestic slaves or be sold
to pedophiles?
There will never be enough homes and vocational training centers until
there is a massive change in government policy and spending. Government
officials must stop siphoning off the money from the treasury for their
sumptuous mansions and foreign travel junkets. They must spend it on
more professional social workers case officers and new homes for street
children and those teenagers in conflict with the law. Life behind bars
for even one day is traumatic and Jesse had been there for almost two
months
A visit to a big child detention center in Metro Manila uncovered the
plight of Jesse a small 9 year old boy from an impoverished family, he
is locked away behind bars and we are trying to set him and many more
free. The charity workers found him and dozens more huddled on the cold
dirty concrete floor surrounded by almost fifty boys, all street
urchins, 7 years old to 14. All are innocent of any crime other than
being poor and homeless. The girls section is totally cut off from all
contact with the outside world. What is happening to them nobody knows.
Jesse and the fifty or so boys possessions are few, a pair of dirty
shorts, a T-shirt, some had slippers, others had none. They were free
from the burdens that wealth brings. But no other kind of freedom for
them. They are the kids behind bars. Never free from disease, toothache,
hunger, fear, anger and loneliness. They have no birthday parties,
education, games, recreation, play time, no nutritious food, no clothes,
toothbrushes or any of the simple needs that make us feel human.
One toilet gave off a stench that made the visitors wretch and almost
vomit. The kids had no beds, and slept on the cold concrete floor.
Bodies were piled on each other in an overcrowded cell that measured
about 12' X 16'. Mosquitoes make deadly nocturnal feasts on there blood
and leave behind the malaria and dengue parasites.
One year ago, 9 youth died in a single period of 15 days. There was no
investigation but a doctor was called in to stop the dying and
incredibly with little more than dedication has prevented more from
dying.
Urgent immediate help is needed for the eight to twelve year olds. A few
can be released to the Preda Boys Home. What are urgently needed in the
jails and "reception" centers is nutritional food, clothes, medical
assistance, recreation, and contact with parents. Action is needed today
and everyday until they are well fed, cared for and helped to go free
and start a life of dignity.
You can contact Fr. Shay Cullen at the Preda Center, Upper Kalaklan,
Olongapo City, Philippines. e-mail: preda@info.com.ph