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FM
Former Member

Three teenage girls arrested after leaving Corentyne orphanage

December 8, 2013 | By | Filed Under News 

 

…allegations of ill-treatment surface

Allegations of maltreatment of children at a popular Corentyne Orphanage are surfacing at a time when three teenage girls of the home are being held in the lock-ups at the Albion Police Station. The girls, 12, 14 and 15-years- old (names given) were arrested on November 20, 2013 for “wandering” away from the home, placed before the courts and sentenced to be institutionalized at the New Opportunity Corps (NOC) in Essequibo where they are expected to be deployed shortly.


Magistrate Ravindra Singh made the ruling earlier last week at the court.

The girls at the Albion Police Station yesterday.

The girls at the Albion Police Station yesterday.

 

This has caused outrage from residents and concerned citizens in the Albion area, including one police officer, who spoke with this newspaper. According to reports, the girls are originally from Skeldon and have been at the home for over four years now. Two of them are sisters. They have no parents who are alive nor do they have any close relatives.


A resident of Albion slammed the administration of the orphanage. The administrators, the person claims, ill-treats the children on a regular basis and that this may have been the reason for the three girls leaving the home.
“The lady does sell out all them children thing. Like she ain’t really fit to run that home anymore, because she get old and she put responsibility on her daughter-in-law,” claimed the resident.


“There was a time when she grandson and son used to live with all the big girls—as soon as they become mature, they lived with these children them! Let them go and investigate!” the person stated.


“Three girls were going to commit suicide and they had to call the police—and these children break down! But they don’t talk—and the ill treatment!”


A police officer, who spoke to this newspaper, claimed, “She sells out the stuff too. A set of things coming in for her for Christmas and she selling them out—What you think she does when she goes to Canada and America? Her daughter-in-law and son going overseas with orphanage children money!”


The 12- year- old is a student of the Corentyne Comprehensive High School, while the 14- year- old attends Port Mourant Secondary. The 15- year- old does not attend school. Kaieteur News spoke to the teacher of the 12- year-old yesterday who is very concerned at the girls’ incarceration at the Albion Police Station.


The teacher, like many other concerned persons, is also concerned that the girls are being posted to the NOC, and is angry at the Magistrate not having Social Services becoming involved first in the matter.


The teacher is also concerned and wanted to know what the police considered wandering, since she claimed that the girls were just outside the gates of the home on November 20.


“I spoke to the [12- year- old] girl personally and the girl said sometimes she go to school without lunch and the teachers would have to buy lunch for her. We never knew the extent of her sadness. When she was absent, the teachers were trying to get in contact with the home but they were given the royal runaround, that there were two such homes in the county.”
The teacher wants the relevant authorities to launch an investigation into the operations at the home. “If someone can [only] go there and do an investigation or call upon the older and younger boys in that place, persons will know about the atrocities that go on in that place.”


But when contacted, Head of the home, (name given) denied all of the accusations.


“They [the three girls] ran away twice. They said nothing but that they wanted to leave!” she said. “It’s the second time they ran away, and I don’t want to keep them anymore…they want to sport at Skeldon…the Magistrate put them to go and learn something at girls school. We are too strict; we don’t allow them to walk on the road,” the Head said.


As for the allegations of ill-treatment, she said, “Well if the children say they are being ill-treated, they should come and find out from the rest of the children.”


Residents in the area are planning a protest in front of the home.

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Whoever heads the orphanage needs to be relieved. Imagine her saying she does not want the children anymore because they want to "sport". Anyone in that capacity as guardian for the children has to be an advocate. She needed to be in the trenches doing her best to rescue these girls even if they have bad habits. That she has the attitude that she has a choice to give up on her charge means she does not have the requisite empathy for the task. No one ever gives up on a child. And that is not even taking into account the other tales of her abusive habits/

 

What galls me most is that there are no family in our "prosperous" society that can take these children in. That we are so hyper culturally attuned that we take easy to " offense and insults" against our culture and yet we have these girls, the boundary of the culture, being left to drift in the wind!

 

And I do not even want to comment on the failure of the national safety nets ie social services etc.

FM
Last edited by Former Member

Could Tola come in and tell us what is going on here. I read these girls were released to another protective  house for orphans. Please let us know what is going on with these places

FM

I am passionate about issues involving the poor and less fortunate. We need to get an update on this matter, we just cannot throw away and ignore these children because they are poor. 

 

Every child from Berbice to Linden to the Interior must be protected and supported. These children cannot suffer while some politicians feast in ghee and honey.

FM
Originally Posted by yuji22:

I am passionate about issues involving the poor and less fortunate. We need to get an update on this matter, we just cannot throw away and ignore these children because they are poor. 

 

Every child from Berbice to Linden to the Interior must be protected and supported. These children cannot suffer while some politicians feast in ghee and honey.

g

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by yuji22:

I am passionate about issues involving the poor and less fortunate. We need to get an update on this matter, we just cannot throw away and ignore these children because they are poor. 

 

Every child from Berbice to Linden to the Interior must be protected and supported. These children cannot suffer while some politicians feast in ghee and honey.

Maybe Irfan can use some of his ill gotten gains to help out

FM
Originally Posted by raymond:
Originally Posted by yuji22:

I am passionate about issues involving the poor and less fortunate. We need to get an update on this matter, we just cannot throw away and ignore these children because they are poor. 

 

Every child from Berbice to Linden to the Interior must be protected and supported. These children cannot suffer while some politicians feast in ghee and honey.

Maybe Irfan can use some of his ill gotten gains to help out

 I now understand the he feasted in some honey. Time to call them out and they should give back a few spoons of ghee and honey to the poor. 

FM

Lots of these Ministers became rich overnight...nothing wrong with achieving success and getting rich...but I think lots of these fellas are not on the up and up...they have become lords overseeing the masses

FM
Originally Posted by raymond:

Lots of these Ministers became rich overnight...nothing wrong with achieving success and getting rich...but I think lots of these fellas are not on the up and up...they have become lords overseeing the masses

 

I will now call them out.

 

I got very angry after reading this article. Some politicians have no heart and care only for themselves and their families while the less fortunate suffer. These children must never be left behind.

FM

Human rights activist Karen de Souza yesterday called the holding of three girls who were sentenced to the New Opportunity Corps (NOC) at the Albion Police Station for 24 days “criminal” and declared that the police, the magistracy, the Child Care & Protection Agency (CC&PA) and the Ministry of Human Services all stand indicted over their treatment.

De Souza also yesterday said that she does not feel comforted by the Commis-sion of Inquiry (COI) established by the ministry to investigate the Camal’s International Home for Homeless & Battered Women where the girls— two sisters aged 13 and 15 and another 15-year-old—were staying and where they were allegedly being ill-treated.

 

http://www.stabroeknews.com/20...minal-de-souza-says/

Mitwah

I wonder how busy the minister is that she cannot leave her bench warming duties and go to the Corentyne and see what is going on? I ride close to that distance in an afternoon after work for exercise so I know the only thing holding her back is utter and complete laziness. I guess Priya set the methodology

FM

Stabroek News Editorial 12-12-13

 

There is something particularly putrid about the way in which the state apparatus treats this country’s children. Not the ones who excel at examinations, essays and spelling bees and make the country look good, but the ones who don’t and are not given the opportunity to even explore if they can do those things; the vulnerable children.

These children, who would have been abandoned by their parents, orphaned or are being neglected, become little more than statistics—one of a number in orphanages or care homes. The now very public plight of three teenage girls who ‘lived’ in a police station in Berbice for close to a month is a case in point. These three girls aged 15, 15 and 13 years old, two of them sisters, lived in a privately-run home in Berbice—Camal’s International Home for Homeless and Battered Women—and had reportedly run away. There were picked up by the police, charged with wandering and placed before the court where they were sentenced to be confined at the New Opportunity Corps (NOC).

In an odd turn of events, no attempt was made to contact the welfare services prior to the sentencing of these girls, but a probation report was ordered after they were sentenced and pending their departure to Onderneeming, Essequibo for confinement at the NOC. And this is where things went horribly wrong. The girls were apparently ‘arrested’ on November 20, charged and sentenced on November 22 and scheduled to return to court on November 26 for the probation reports. But no report was submitted to the court on that day and the teens simply remained in police custody. It seems they would have remained there indefinitely were it not for a teacher, who somehow discovered their plight.

The protocol for dealing with these issues should have seen that teacher informing the headmaster/mistress, who would have then taken the matter to child welfare services and the Ministry of Education. It seems none of this was followed. Instead, outrageously, the children’s plight along with a very prominent photograph of them ended up in the social media on a reporter’s Facebook page after that reporter was made privy to the facts.

As if having their human rights violated and their dignity removed were not enough, the owner of the orphanage was allowed to further malign them accusing them of all sorts of deviant behaviours, duly reported in a section of the media.

It wasn’t until a lawyer stepped in this past Monday and appealed the magistrate’s decision to send the children to the NOC that the odds seemed to slant ever so slightly in their favour. They have now been sent to a second children’s home in the Ancient County, where it is hoped they will fare better.

The list of adults who failed these children is long and shameful. According to information gleaned from the orphanage, the girls had been there for two years and a year respectively. What caused the drastic change in behaviour that saw them escape to ‘wander’? And if there were behavioural problems why had the matron/owner of that institution not contacted the Child Care and Protection Agency (CCPA)? Why was one of the 15-year-old girls not attending school? How long had it been since she attended any school and why was this not reported to the authorities?

The teacher who learned of the girls’ incarceration did not follow the established protocol. While she may or may not be aware of its existence, a call to the CCPA, even placed anonymously ought to have been her next course of action.

The reporter who plastered their images on social media and continues to do so is obviously not au fait with how situations involving minors should be reported or does not care. Either way, she does the profession a disservice.

How come no police officer at the station where they were being held—male or female—saw anything wrong with having three underage girls in custody and for such an extended period?

But the epic failure is that of the Ministry of Human Services and Social Security for not following its own laid-down protocol. In June 2008, amid huge fanfare at the Pegasus Hotel, the ministry launched a booklet of 25 minimum standards for orphanages. The then minister Ms Priya Manickchand had said that while compliance by privately-run institutions was voluntary, non-compliance would see her ministry taking the necessary steps even if it meant moving to the courts.

One of the standards required each home to appoint “a management board” which would include one or two volunteers from the community. The board’s task would be to examine house rules, reorganise the management systems as necessary and instigate record-keeping among other things. It was envisaged that the homes and their boards would be monitored by a visiting committee of 12 independent volunteers who would visit the homes in groups of three to assess compliance with standards.

If a home consistently failed to meet the necessary minimum standards of care then the inspector and the ministry would take action, it was reported back then. It was noted that the children in the homes would have already had very unhappy experiences and some might have been victims of emotional or physical abuse or rejection by their families and would need extra special care and attention to pull them back from the edge of anger, frustration, hopelessness and despair.

The fact that the ministry has launched an investigation into the Camal’s Home, while commendable, suggests that it may not have a board and the visiting committee may not have done so in a while.  How many other homes in Guyana share the same fate? It had been estimated in 2008 that there were some 600 children in orphanages; what is that figure today?

At a seminar in March this year, Director of Children Services at the (CC&PA) Ann Greene had urged homes to lift their standards. It was revealed that homes were found to be rodent-infested, have some improperly stored food and appalling sanitary conditions. Yet, not once was any move made to the courts with regard to any of this.

Finally, Ms Greene was right in her call for children not to be charged with status offences like wandering. We would hope that Ms Greene will take the opportunity now presented to mount a lobby against this.

FM
Last edited by Former Member

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