The Asian Age

NGO project helped rescue, rehabilita­te 6,000 children

- NISHTHA GROVER

In a successful attempt, an NGO has been able to rescue and rehabilita­te 6,000 street children from Delhi and other states. Chetna’s “Dreams on Wheels” project has shown progressio­n in giving a new life to the street children. The project will now be spreading its wings and reach out to more avenues to rescue children. The figures show that in less than a decade, these children have been able to get a new lease of life.

Chetna, a group started in 2002, works towards empowering kids from underprivi­leged background­s, especially those who are runaways or ones that have been forced to live in streets and take up petty crimes.

The group was working towards uplifting the lives of the children who end up at railway stations. The NGO will also be working at the Old Delhi railway station now after its success in Hazrat Nizamuddin railway station.

In a bid to give these children a second chance at life, the railway wing of the Delhi police connected with Chetna to start an “open basic education programme” to rehabilita­te these children. In fact, they have also started a school in the Nizamuddin police station.

The officials involved in the project told this newspaper that many runaways arrive in Delhi through trains. It is imperative to target railway platforms to find kids in need of rescue. They noted that about 40-50 such children come every day to Delhi on trains.

Children, who are rescued, are not only given another chance at securing education, they are also given health check-ups and provided with refreshmen­ts.

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