Felicia Browne, Human and Gender Justice Advisor Caribbean Mentorship Institute
Felicia Browne

The rights of children are often under-evaluated. It has been known that children under the age of 18 years often forced to work to provide for their families. Many of these children died as the result of the harsh environments that their tender and under-nourished bodies endured. As a result, developing nations have designed specific guidelines to protect children from social implications that have had dire effects on their lives. The rights of children became an effective deterrence for against child – labour.

In the Caribbean, there has been a growing concern over child labour and indirect forms of begging. Children are being seen working various forms of street hustling like the selling of counterfeit movies, stolen electronic devices, or local produce like fruits and vegetables. In more severe cases, child’s rights advocates have reported high incidents of child sexual abuses by children who are expected to provide for themselves. These economic burdens that are placed on children can have devastating impacts on their lives. Many of these children are lured in various forms of illicit activities like child pornography, thief, gang-violence and child-trafficking.

Child trafficking, has become a serious concern for many Caribbean societies, in particular as many are struggling with their economic and social inequalities. Child trafficking can take various forms, including but not limited to, forced child begging, sexual exploitation, child pornography, child marriage and child soldiers. UNICEF have also reported that the number of children being trafficked across the globe are mainly trafficked to engage in street begging, prostitution and petty crimes like stealing.

The Caribbean region is not immune to child exploitation. In various countries, children, can be during the vacation or school breaks, begging for money, food supplies and other forms of basic necessities. Some of these children because of the harsh economic realities of their households are placed in unbearable dilemmas to contribute to their families’ misfortunes. Many families believe that it is harmless to have their children participate in the economic contributions of the household, but many are unaware of the dangers that their children may face if they are placed in unsupervised environments. The difficulties in curbing child begging are mainly due to the fact that children are minors and the guardians are usually the ones who enforce their activities. As a result, these vulnerable minors are coerced by a family member or loved ones to take up their responsibilities by becoming economic providers for their families.

There are a number of solutions that government agencies and communities leaders can provide to assist children and their families. Many families are challenged by inadequate social support and cannot afford the growing increases of basic needs like food and shelter. In many cases, especially in the Caribbean, low income families cannot afford the high cost of living within their countries. This places additional burdens, in which the immediate needs of their children are either decreased or ignored for other factors like rent or utility payments. Such social dilemmas must be fully assessed and given immediate priority if we are hoping for more healthy and peaceful societies. Governmental, civil and family agencies should ensure that every family have adequate health, education and social support. They should ensure that every child’s basic needs like food, water, shelter and education are addressed. They can ensure that parents and families are also educated on the rights of children. Parents and guardians should be educated on the dangers that children can encounter when they are left to negotiate with strangers for assistance(monetary or commodity). A child’s ability to foresee such dangers is limited and as a result, we as a society ,should also be mindful of these risks. A child’s right is a right to live in a healthy, educational and equal social. No society can flourish without setting the proper foundations for its children.

77 responses to “Child Begging”


  1. first of all if there needs to be mandatory laws on the books in barbados to report such abuse in barbados as of now there are no such laws and reporting is discretionary,,,,,,,


  2. @ ac
    We will need to invite Rihanna to come to BU to describe you…..
    LOL
    …or we could ask Sunny Sunshine Shine….


  3. A sex registry in the small island of Barbados is a bad idea because it might probably, promote a retaliatory mentality.


  4. Ok, we do nothing, who cares that all the while children are being abused.


  5. Steupsss
    David you mind foolish Dompey…?

    What retaliatory mentality what?
    Dompey just wanted to use some big words…..

    …what the hell will they do in retaliation….?
    Publish a counter register of NON sex offenders?
    Steupsss


  6. The only possible way to deter incest in my estimation, is by enacting tougher laws which should act as a deterrent to such conduct. Now, since the problem is so prevalent in the Barbadian society, a heighten public awareness campaign ought to be implemented. While encourage victims to come forth to expose these perpetrators, but also protecting the privacy of the innocent victims should of be the utmost importance. (1) Bring awareness to the problem (2) ) Protecting the privacy of the innocent victims (3) Providing the necessary treatment for victims to address their psychological needs (4) Prosecute these perpetrators to the fullest extent of the law (5) Provide these perpetrators with the necessary therapy to address their sexual disfunytionality.


  7. look the laws are there but are not fully enforced,,below are the many obstructions and impediments within the law that hinders,, professor brass bowl and his simplistic ggobly gook would first have to attack and adresss relevant solutions to these causes and problems …..

    http://www.unicef.org/easterncaribbean/cao_unicefeco_national_protocol_Barbados.pdf


  8. We can’t possibly take “CASTRATION” of the table because of the nature of this violation. It may sound inhumane and heartless, but it would send the kind of message we’re hoping for.


  9. Bush Tea

    If the school system in Barbados is unable to detect the signs of Child- Sexual – Abuse, then we must educate our educators, regarding what to look for…. There are two obvious signs of Child- sexual- Abuse: Self-Injurious – Behavior (SIB) and Isolation.


  10. The challenge for the authorities there in Barbados, is to find ways and means to break this cycle of sexual-victimization because research has now shown us that those who are Abusing, have been Abused themselves.


  11. And finally, David, we ought not look at the objective signs of this deviant behavior only, but sociological as well as the psychological factors which have given rise to its genesis within our culture.


  12. Dompey | September 1, 2014 at 2:21 PM |
    Bush Tea

    If the school system in Barbados is unable to detect the signs of Child- Sexual – Abuse, then we must educate our educators, regarding what to look for…. There are two obvious signs of Child- sexual- Abuse: Self-Injurious – Behavior (SIB) and Isolation.
    ……………………………………………………………………………………………
    Hey Bro! Some of these same educators are abusers. At the recent , a Diaspora Conference aka Bajan Yankees,in Barbados, Yankees one of the participants described her profession as being a Child Abuse Investigator.Wonder if we have such persons working for the relevant bodies here.


  13. @Colonel Buggy

    Some people just don’t get it, the nature of relationships on a small island provides a cloak for the incest.


  14. Colonel Buggy

    Here in the US, the people who work in the Social-Services area, are mandated reporters. Meaning: police, nurses, doctors, teachers, fireman etc, are compel by state and federal law to report signs of child-sexual-abuse or else their will face the legal sanctions.


  15. Colonel Buggy

    Perhaps, there is a need for such a system in Barbados, to address the current epidemic of child-sexual-molestation?


  16. The latest statistics here in the US, indicates the one out five women have been sexually molested in their lifetime, and one out of eight men as well. Which tells us that the problem still exist here in the US, but not on the scale as it does in Barbados.


  17. David

    You’re talking nonsense David because there are smaller islands through our world that haven’t kind of problem you have indicated earlier. So you’re saying that the men who reside on the island of Barbados, haven’t any morals? That their do not know that it is wrong to engage in a sexual relationship with a Child? I do not care what the culture there in Barbados demands because as a man who is in full control of his mental faculties; he ought to know that it is immoral to have sexual relations with a child.


  18. Which small islands?


  19. David, you seem to indicate that there is a systemic problem with respect to morality, which touchest every echelon of society. So you’re in essence, saying that the men there in Barbados think with their DICkS rather than with their BRAINS?


  20. David, what difference would it make whether or not I indicate the islands that I have spoken about? I have stated a fact and I stand by what I have written. If you have a culture of molesters there in Barbados, as you have rightfully indicated, then perhaps the end results of their actions ought to be detrimental for the society as a whole.


  21. David, you’re raising a generation of broken childern, whose only fault is to be born and bred in a society of sexual predators.


  22. if the system is broken the culture would persists..i


  23. Shining a spotlight on the issue of child molestation, ought to the course we must take in order to proper inform the public conscience on this very important issue. A problem that could potentially erode the foundation of any given society because children are the only future the human race have left. A lot of developed countries have taken steps to address this problem and it is therefore imperative that developing countries follow their course of action.


  24. islandgal246 | August 28, 2014 at 7:42 AM |

    “This is one of Barbados’ darkest secrets that many will deny. If there was DNA testing many couples and families will reveal how close they really are. Our gene pool is exhausted and that is probably why we have so many asthmatics and diabetics.”

    The problem in Barbados is not the fertility rate, which has been steadily declining but now stands at a level of about 1.6 (depending on which statistics you decide to trust) and which is OK in a population of about 280,000. The problem is the replacement rate over the long term—that’s to say, how many children are born to replace the people who die. I haven’t seen any reliable statistics on this for Barbados specifically and I doubt that the data even exist, so let’s say it’s around the universal 1.1. In that case, Barbados has a bit of a problem coming up.

    Of course, we have to factor in all of the people of prime age that Barbados exports to the rest of the world every year (large, proportionally) and all the people that Barbados imports from the rest of the world (small and shrinking, most particularly during election campaigns when xenophobia prevails). As far as I’ve been able to determine, there are no reliable data on that, either.

    The bigger problems are cultural and political. One cultural problem is the general sense of “let’s go out and shag someone, and then leave the resulting kid with the grands”). One political problem, so eloquently expressed by BU family member Negroman, is that all immigration should be stopped, especially from Guyana. Let’s keep the race pure. And so, necessarily, let’s keep shagging the cousins. It’s a chronic problem in the UK, where the Pakistani community has a fantastically disproportionate share of live births with acute genetic defects. Why? Because in a population of more than 60 million, they’re shagging their cousins.

    With given cultural attitudes and a given political mindset, especially during election campaigns, this problem in Barbados is only going to get worse with each passing year. Every single passing year. It’s interesting as a clinical observation, and heart-breaking if you’re the clinician who has to deal with it.

    If Barbados is to abjure, as we surely must, this delusional Woodstock-era clap-trap dream that somehow we’re all going to get back to the land, live off cassava, incinerate our cellphones, get with Fidel, abandon technology and let the world pass us by (it being an absolute given that the world will do that), then Barbados has to export even more people who can’t live without cellphones, and import more people who can live without them while they’re washing dishes in Bajan restaurants or building Bajan roads.

    And if Barbados is going to export more people, then it needs an education system capable of producing people who can at least write a basic English that is as good as the English written by all the Hungarians and Poles and Croatians and Latvians now flooding the international labor markets. So far—despite the massive advantage that Barbados has in having English as its national language, and despite the massive disadvantage of all the Hungarians and Poles and Croatians and Latvians—the education system of Barbados has proven woefully unable to do even that.


  25. David

    It is the prevailing tendency to look at the society as the source of the problem rather than the individual himself. Because we have be taught to think that we’re the products of our own environment. But this you ought to know: any individual who decides to molest an innocent child, does so because he wants to satisfy his own perverted desires. It is his personal choice and not that of society and as you well know: morals are personal; they spring from personal insight, judgment and choice and not society entirely.


  26. Jack Bowman, you’re absolutely correct about the use of proficient English amongst the learned class there in Barbados. I hold two degree and because of the poor foundation that I have gotten in Barbados, I struggle continually with my grammar on a daily basis.


  27. Dr Brian Talarico, North Bay Has been convicted of child molestation, an possession of child pornography on his computer. Sexually molesting a young boy. He had prior convictions for child molestation in 1990 and 2001. After his parole in 2006. Dr. Talarico Brian Works for North Bay Regional Health Centre, and elsewhere, despite his background, and numerous complaints against him of abuse, fraud, negligence, and imprisonment.

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