Friday, April 3, 2009

Acute Hiv Rash On Palms



Lazio / Ostiense 24 Afghan children were asleep in the drain also


a hundred people in a dormitory at the station abusive
Rome, April 3 (AGI)


A group of Afghan children who lived in Rome in the center, between the waste and filth of the Ostiense station in the midst of other desperate, forced to sleep on the floor or stuck in the drain, even a place privileged because hot: this is the tragic reality of a group of immigrants between 10 and 15 years told by a service Sat 2000. Minors, 24, all between 10 and 15 years, Afghan refugees who survived the war and a long journey, were found by Polfer in routine reconnaissance service station Ostiense. With them in the dormitory of the station even abusive adults 93, camped out between the tracks. Children are now reception facilities. Following the recommendation of the police station of Afghan children found in Piazzale Ostiense - then explained the Councillor for Social Policies of the Capitol, Sveva Belviso - the social operating room of the municipality of Rome has intervened immediately and accompanied the children into two structures host agreement with the administration Capitoline. The images and testimonies gathered by Sat 2000 reveals under the cover of the manhole covers and cardboard: Here are the bedding of desperate Ostiense station, sleeping or just lying down vertically with an open hole to breathe, but even a special place because the heat and was paid for this. Those who saw them said that they enter at night, and leave at dawn. Invisible. Belviso It warns that the centers for unaccompanied children in Rome are full, because demand has doubled over the past four months. Afghan children so that is just one example of a situation in Rome is becoming increasingly difficult in only four months of the request reception of unaccompanied minors has increased by 100%. " The 900 seats available in the hundred-care facilities, including accredited and contracted, are saturated and - alert the assessor - "we are often forced to rely to other regions, with very high costs."


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