Kids Behind Bars
Little has changed in the Philippines prison system since that day several years ago when "I found a 6-year-old, named Rosie, behind prison bars clutching a drink can and crying her heart out for her mother. A dozen or so other street children were sprawled on the hard concrete floor, unconscious with exhaustion and hunger. The toxic fumes they inhaled from a plastic bag filled with industrial
glue - taken when local police rounded them up - had knocked out some.
The cheap drug was their only remedy for the constant pangs from their
empty stomachs. The Cries of the Oppressed In some city jails, the young girls are brought in from the streets to be sexually abused for a price by the guards and the adult male prisoners. In prison, sexual assault of young boys is all too common. Some are turned into child prostitutes while others are physically abused, leaving scars and psychological wounds in them all. This brutal experience can lead to a cycle of abuse and violence that fills the streets with young juveniles in continual conflict with the law. Fighting Back Our organization-called PREDA (Peoples Recovery, Empowerment, and Development Assistance Foundation) – is doing all it can to save these children. Part of our work is organizing jail visits and investigating the case if imprisoned children with our jail rescue tram We find many minors held in illegal detention whose rights have been violated. Some suffer from abuse, like the 8-to-12-year-olds brought to cemeteries by police and threatened with execution. Then they are tortured with cigarette burns until they confess to some crime for which the police want a conviction to get a reward and promotion. Other young teen-agers are jailed without evidence; they can be detained for weeks before seeing a prosecutor, lawyer or magistrate. Our efforts have helped release several children, but we find many more behind bars. It is not all doom and gloom for the imprisoned children of the Philippines and elsewhere if we work together to help them. Fr. Shay Cullen of Ireland is a Columban Father working in the Philippines since 1969. PREDA (www.preda.org) was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2001.
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