Saturday, September 18, 2010

My best three songs. These are the ones!

Homecoming by Kanye West


Te Amo by Rihanna



Hey Ya by Outkasts

Uganda-Western street begging, not so much different!

It is a common scene to see lame and elderly people or children on the streets of Ugandan city, Kampala seated on strategic positions near banks, busy streets, supermarkets and taxi stages holding boxes, plates or cups begging people for anything ranging from money to food. For some its a career, while others, unbearable circumstances force them to beg.

Most people in Uganda beg as a result of their physical disability, poverty and displacements. Displacements are in most cases caused by war and famine.

Street kids, women and the elderly from the famine and drought affected Karamoja region, war hit Northern Uganda and South Sudan are the most common beggars on Kampala streets.

Many people in Uganda have also made a career out of begging, a friend of Solomon called Paul from Eastern Uganda recently told him of a rich beggar - without any physical disabilities - in Mbale town of Eastern Uganda, who has made a fortune out of begging. 'At his level, he has a lot of money because he always helps people with change.'

Although begging can bring happiness to some, after a good days harvest. To others, it can be quite annoying especially, when young beggars especially, street children aggressively follow people and sometimes dirtening their dresses in the process of asking for money.

Its no surprise, that there are beggars too in the rich western countries. A Slovenian friend Gregor Strehovec recently said, there are poor people everywhere in the world, meaning there are beggars everywhere in the World. Slovenia is a country in Western Europe.

However, begging styles are different from country to country basing on the legal framework, technological development and societal norms. Countries like USA where begging is banned or highly restricted in some of its cities like Chicago, San Francisco and Santa Cruz, people have adopted other ways of begging like online begging.

In India, the Hindu religion encourages spiritual people known as Sadhus beg for food to enable them do their spiritual work uninterrupted. They also view begging as a noble practice which promotes humility and gratitude.

In Uganda, grown up street children are adopting new ways of begging because people go on losing sympathy for them as they grow old. Now, they use young children who are always lined up on busy Kampala streets to collect money on their behalf.

In some western cities, people from poor countries are sometimes forced by organized gangs to beg on their behalf.

Srehovec says begging in Europe inst so much different from Uganda, ' like Uganda, European beggars are always strategically positioned in busy city streets wearing dirty clothing, the only difference, European beggars are mostly old people without physical disabilities. A few physically handicapped beggars in Slovenia are mostly, from the war affected parts of Europe like Bosnia.'

Unlike Ugandan beggars, Strehovec says European beggars also earn a lot of money and have organizations to cater for their basic necessities of life, 'in Slovenia beggars can earn up-to over 50 Euros a day, which is a good amount for their survival. There is also an organization called Kings of the street, which provides them with food and clothing.'