Child beggars fill Mosul streets a year on from Daesh

An Iraqi child peddlar sells tissue paper to cars driving down a street in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul on July 7, 2018. (AFP)
  • Residents say gangs are turning the street children into organized groups, or forcing them to pay a fee to beg in public places
  • Each day, dozens of children spread out across Mosul’s intersections and traffic signals to ask for money

MOSUL, Iraq: Every day little Mohammed Salem roams the streets of Mosul, left with no choice but to hawk tissues after his father was killed by Daesh who overran Iraq’s second city.
A year on from Iraqi forces announcing the “liberation” of Mosul from the Daesh group, the scars of the bloody nine-month offensive to oust the militants are still visible in the city.
After losing parents either in the battle or during Daesh’s brutal three year occupation of Mosul, dozens of children have turned to street peddling or begging to survive.
“I sell tissues... I go out every day from seven in the morning to 10 at night,” 12-year-old Salem tells AFP, wiping sweat from his face as the sun beats down on the Nabi Younis junction in eastern Mosul.
His mother’s only child, Salem hopes to scratch out a living for the two of them. His father was killed by Daesh before the push to retake Mosul began, leaving the family without a breadwinner.
According to the group Orphan’s Joy in Nineveh, encompassing Mosul and the wider province, there is no official data on the number of children who have lost their parents.
But the group’s research has pointed to the “presence of 6,200 orphans in Nineveh, of which 3,283 whose parents were killed in the latest events in Mosul,” the organization’s head, Kedar Mohammed, told AFP.

Mosul’s two orphanages — one for boys and one for girls — have seen large numbers of children aged six to 18 seeking shelter, according to administrators.
Each day, dozens of children spread out across Mosul’s intersections and traffic signals to ask for money.
Thin and dressed in tattered clothes, they trail pedestrians and extend hands to passing cars. Some wash windows or sell tissues and water.
“My family was killed and our house was destroyed in the bombardment of the Old City,” 10-year-old Ali Bunyan told AFP, unable to hold back his tears.
Fighting destroyed nearly 90 percent of western Mosul’s Old City, which now lies in ruins and is devoid of any major reconstruction projects.
“I have no relatives now. I have to beg to support myself... I’ve been unable to find work because I’m young,” said Bunyan, who like many of the other children refused to speak about his current place of residence.
Nineveh provincial council member Khalaf Al-Hadidi said that “until now, there is no real project or study either from the federal or local government to deal with this phenomenon.”
Finding a solution was becoming increasingly important, he said, “especially as the street children are exposed to various kinds of exploitation.”

Residents say gangs are turning the street children into organized groups, or forcing them to pay a fee to beg in public places.
“One day, as I was waiting for my appointment at a medical clinic, I watched an employee at the reception kick out a small girl that was begging,” said 35-year-old Mosul resident Abu Hamid.
“As she left, she told me she had been kicked out for refusing to increase the weekly agreed-upon fee,” he said.
According to social researcher Fatima Khalaf, “conditions in Mosul have left children vulnerable to numerous violations in the street.”
“If they are left out in the streets... they will become useless members of society, and perhaps some of them will become criminals,” she said.
Ghaleb Ahmed, a 20-year-old Mosul municipal employee, thinks it would be better to target the top of the “gangs and systems that manage the begging and exploit the children.”
“This phenomenon counts as a criminal project and terrorism, and it creates a corrupt and psychologically damaged generation,” he said.