#454 erkenningsnummer P708816
november 2, 2016 \ newsweekly - € 0,75 \ read more at www.flanderstoday.eu current affairs \ P2
Politics \ P4
Sizzling SomerS
The mayor of Mechelen, Bart Somers, has been nominated for the World Mayor Prize for his city’s outreach to refugees \4
business \ P8
lunar life
innovation \ P9
education \ P10
art & living \ P11
BeaStS of Burden
Where there’s water, there’s life. Or so hope Brussels scientists, who have discovered a hidden sea on Saturn’s moon Dione
As the centenary of the First World War continues, a graphic novelist relates the stories of some very special war-time animals
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In good company
© Courtesy minor-ndako
a brussels-based non-profit lends a hand to unaccompanied refugee minors sally tipper Follow sally on Twitter \ @sallybtipper
The non-profit organisation Minor-Ndako takes care of refugee children who arrive in Belgium alone, giving them the best possible chance to overcome trauma, form connections and start rebuilding their lives.
A
report this summer by the children’s charity Unicef showed that for every 10 child refugees who make the journey from North Africa to Europe, nine are travelling alone. In the first five months of the year, more than 7,000 under-18s arrived in Europe via Italy without parents or other adults – twice as many as in the same period last year. For the past 14 years, the Brussels-based non-profit Minor-Ndako has been offering care and guidance for such
children in Flanders and the capital. By providing shared accommodation, counselling and other practical help, they aim to integrate unaccompanied foreign minors into local life and give them the best possible chance to rebuild their lives. “In 2002, when we were set up, there was a real lack of care for unaccompanied minors,” spokesperson Semma Groenendijk explains. “Nobody really knew what to do with them, so they’d often end up stuck in massive reception centres.” The term “unaccompanied minor” has a strict legal definition, referring to anyone under the age of 18 from a non-EU country who is in Belgium without a legal guardian. They may be under the care of an older sibling, other
relative or family friend, but if that person is not the child’s legal guardian, they’re considered to be unaccompanied. When these minors arrives in Belgium, the government appoints a guardian, who arranges their initial accommodation and represents them in legal matters. Once they’ve been taken in by Minor-Ndako, a teenager is likely to live in a supervised residential group for a year or more, going to school, learning Dutch and getting their asylum process under way. Then, when Minor-Ndako staff feel they’re ready, they can move on to a shared apartment, where the emphasis is less on care and more on learning to stand on their own two feet. “There is an assistant, but the youngsters have a budget, continued on page 7