Our projects in Democratic Republic of Congo:
13,877 street children in kinshasa

Supporting street children in Kinshasa

We’re providing a vital lifeline for street children — especially girls

and young women living violent, dangerous lives on the streets of

one of Kinshasa’s roughest neighbourhoods. Our night ambulance

and drop-in centre are helping girls to keep safe on, and ultimately

to leave the streets – where most are forced into selling sex just to survive.

Decades of conflict in the Congo have left millions of people in desperate poverty and without a functioning welfare state to rely on. Tens of thousands of children live on the streets of the capital Kinshasa.

Some have to earn money to help supplement their meagre family income. Some are living on the streets because their families simply couldn’t afford to feed and care for them.

Life on the streets is an extremely tough and often violent existence. Many children collect scrap plastic or beg for food and money. Some turn to robbery and many develop alcohol and drug dependencies as a means of coping with the brutality of their everyday life. Lots of the girls are forced into prostitution as a means of survival. It’s not uncommon for them to have babies of their own as a result of these encounters.

Photos: Zute Lightfoot.

Quickfacts

  • Objectives
    Vulnerable girls living and working on the streets of Kinshasa
  • Dates
    2010 - 2013
  • Estimated direct beneficiaries
    1,870
  • Funding partner
    Comic Relief
  • Local partner
    OSEPER

2011 Impact

  • Girls who regularly used the Drop-in-centre:
    171
  • Treatments by the ambulance (not including condom distribution, health advice etc):
    960
  • Police officers trained in child protection
    126
  • Girls reunited with their families (almost a third were under 12)
    33
Life is hard in the street.
Here I found the family that I lost.
A 14 year old girl who
attends our Drop-In Centre.

 

Read a hard-hitting feature about our Kinshasa project which featured on the front page of The Times.

What we're doing

Night Ambulance
Our ambulance tours the streets of Tshangu district 6 nights a week. It provides vital medical and social care to street girls

Drop-in centre
We’ve built a safe-haven for girls to come to during the day. They can leave their babies here knowing they’ll get the food and nurturing environment they need. The girls and young women can also get a free education, medical help and support to build a life away from the streets. It also provides emergency accommodation for girls in acute danger.

Community sensitisation
As well as treating the symptoms, we’re also tackling the problem at its source. We’re working with the police and military, street boys and other men to tackle harmful attitudes towards girls, and tackling impunity for perpetrators of sexual violence against them.

Family Reunification
We offer family mediation for those children who want to try and move back home, help them to get back into school, or earn a living alternative to sex work.

The video

night ambulance in kinshasa

It costs just £74 per night for our ambulance to provide vital care and support for vulnerable girls living extraordinarily tough lives on the streets of Kinshasa.

Bernadette

17 year old Bernadette ended up on the streets after her mum tried to force her to marry a 56 year old man.

Find out what happened next and how War Child is helping her...