Wednesday, November 20, 2024
Home > Counties > NCCS lays down plans to phase out children’s homes

NCCS lays down plans to phase out children’s homes

The National Council for Children Services (NCCS) has started sensitization programmes across the country in readiness to transition children from children’s homes and integrate them into families and communities.

NCCK is bringing in key stakeholders, such as government officials of relevant institutions, religious leaders, elders, and community members, to formulate care reforms that will enable a smooth transition for the children.

Earlier this month, Cabinet Secretary for Labour and Social Protection Florence Bore said that the government was mulling the closure of all existing private children’s homes as it draws up plans to establish its own public children’s rescue centres.

The CS noted that poor management and lack of proper monitoring of private rescue centres allow unscrupulous people to continue trafficking in children; thus, establishing state-owned public rescue centres will make child trafficking in the country more difficult.

Data from the Social Protection Department showed that there are 45,000–50,000 children living in about 855 private charitable children’s institutions and others living in government-run institutions as of November 2022.

There is also more concern from various stakeholders that children in the homes have slower psychological growth compared to those in a family setting.

Speaking during a sensitization forum for Garissa and Wajir, the counties’ children’s stakeholders, NCCS Chief Executive Officer Abdinoor Mohamed said that the new childcare reforms are in line with the global shift from institutional care to homecare.

“Children will be transitioned from traditional institutional care to family and community-based care. Through empirical research, it has been established that children thrive, grow, and live better and more happily in family and community settings, while institutionalised care has far-reaching effects on children,” Mohamed said.

“In the 2019 United Nations’ General Assembly, in which Kenya took part, there were resolutions on children where there was a preference for strengthening families and bringing up the children within the families. It is out of this that we have developed a 10-year strategy to have as many children as possible, from children’s homes to family care,” he added.

The CEO said that the plan is already being implemented in some counties and that the reforms have been largely accepted by the stakeholders.

Mohamed said that some of the ways in which the children will be integrated into families will include foster care, kinship care, adoption, Kafalah, which is the Islamic equivalent of foster care, and supported independent living.

He said that the government will be keen to ensure that the children will be taken care of in the families that will absorb them, with regular visits by child officials to monitor their progress.

The children will also be taken through psychological preparations before being released to their new families and communities.

On his part, NCCS Board Chairperson Bishop Bernard Kariuki said that it is important for children growing up to receive parental love and care, which may not be found in care institutions.

“There is a problem because the children’s homes do not keep those children who attain 18 years. These children who have spent most of their time in their homes do not know other people outside those institutions, making it hard for them to integrate with others,” Kariuki said.

“We need to start having these children and take care of them because they are our future generation. The government has already taken the lead to enlist all caregivers for orphaned children in the Inua Jamii programme, which will give them some stipend to help the children,” he added.

Bishop Kariuki urged all the relatives who have children in children homes to make plans to go for them and raise them within their families, adding that the government will need the collaboration of society to achieve these reforms.

By Erick Kyalo

Leave a Reply