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Church Officials in Djibouti Highlight Service to Street Children amid COVD-19 Challenges

The flag of Djibouti

Officials of the Catholic Church in Djibouti have, in a report, highlighted their service to street children in the Horn of Africa country with basic needs, amid the COVID-19 challenges.

In the Wednesday, January 27 report obtained by ACI Africa, the officials say that towards the end of last year, they offered night shelter to about 80 minors aged between 7 and 18 years, through Caritas Djibouti.

“The night shelter provided maximum protection to the beneficiaries of the program because it helped to better protect the children from the spread of the virus,” the Bishop of Djibouti, Giorgio Bertin has been quoted as saying, adding, “All the minors were tested for COVID-19, and in compliance with the containment measures provided.”

At the shelter, the street children “were given three meals a day and an afternoon snack, as well as clothing and hygiene products,” the Bishop, a member of Order of Friars Minor (OFM) notes in the January 27 report.

In their free time, the children engaged in various activities among them sports, video games, manual workshops as well as regular education activities such as language courses in English and French, the Italian-born Prelate adds in the report by Agenzia Fides, the information service of Propaganda Fide.

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According to the 74-year-old Prelate, the Muslim street children “had the opportunity to cook and prepare their ‘iftar,’ the evening dinner," during the Holy Month of Ramadan.

Located on the Northeast coast of the Horn of Africa, Djibouti has recorded 5,926 COVID-19 cases, 5,844 recoveries and 62 related deaths.

With the first case of the pandemic confirmed in the country on 18 March 2020, the government declared a series of containment measures, among them, the suspension of commercial passenger flights, closure of schools and places of worship, and a nationwide lockdown.

"The main difficulties encountered during the lockdown were mainly due to the low number of toilets and the intolerance of children who were not used to being in a closed place following the rules,” Bishop Bertin says in the January 27 report.

Bound by Eritrea to the North, Ethiopia to the West and Southwest, and Somalia to the South, Djibouti has an estimated 5,000 Catholics who amount to one percent of the country’s 973,560 population, as per 2019 statistics.

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The Catholic faithful are spread across five parishes that fall under the country’s only Catholic Diocese of Djibouti.