Number of children benefiting from the Safe Childhood Centre for the
Protection and Rehabilitation of Street Children in 2001-2002 and
expected number of beneficiaries in 2003-2005
1.
Safe Childhood Centre/Capital Municipality
15
61
65
65
80
286
2.
Safe Childhood Centre/Aden
-
-
65
65
80
210
Total
15
61
130
130
160
496
291. The Project was also extended to include two new homes for juvenile offenders in the governorates of Hodeidah and Hadramawt, which it will provide with a small subsidy during 2003. In both cases, the numbers of beneficiaries and the numbers expected to benefit by 2005 have already been stated.
Comprehensive Social Services Centres
292. Since first established, these two Centres have continued to be directly subsidized by the Project. The following table shows the number of male and female beneficiaries of their services during the period 2001-2003.
Table 30
Beneficiaries of the health section at each Centre
Name of centre/governorate
Number of beneficiaries
Total
Children
Women
1.
Comprehensive Social Services Centre/Capital Municipality
312
198
510
2.
Comprehensive Social Services Centre/Aden
850
589
1 439
Total
1 162
787
1 949
Table 31
Beneficiaries of the social section at each Centre
Name of centre/
governorate
Social groups benefiting from the social section
Total
Orphans
Disabled persons
Street children
Working children
Widows
Abandoned women
Divorced women
Poor families
1. Comprehensive Social
Services Centre/Capital
Municipality
27
9
-
-
10
-
-
71
117
2. Comprehensive Social
Services Centre/Aden
38
43
4
1
65
14
42
134
341
Total
65
52
4
1
75
14
42
205
458
Table 32
Beneficiaries of the education section at each Centre
Name of centre/governorate
Tutoring for drop-out students
Reinforcement classes
Learning materials assistance for children from poor families
Female literacy
Education and rehabilitation
Total
1. Comprehensive Social
Services Centre/Capital
Municipality
7
72
-
42
9
130
2. Comprehensive Social
Services Centre/Aden
30
64
40
45
10
189
Total
37
136
40
87
19
319
293. These juvenile welfare services reflect the indicators of the growth and development of not only the content and substance of these services but also of the target groups. Although not available in every geographical region, they are important when it comes to developing such aspects of social protection as rehabilitation, treatment and care in the target regions. They are also an essential term of reference which can be used in the future as a basis for indicators of the growth in service. An assessment of their impact on the children targeted will also make it possible to develop them further and establish the extent to which they should be consolidated.