The smallest country in Central America, El Salvador has a culture of violence and has one of the highest violent crime rates in Latin America.
El Salvador’s turbulent past and history of natural disasters has had a huge impact on the shaping of what it is today. The 1980 civil war, a war caused by the growing disparity between the richer and poorer left the country in ruins worsening poverty and its hazardous levels of violence. The road to recovery for El Salvador was then hit by a series of devastating natural disasters spelling further trouble and unrest. For the people daily life is still a constant struggle against the backdrop of poverty, instability and overwhelming levels of violence.
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The streets in El Salvador are no home for the vulnerable children. Their everyday search for basic needs can often bring them into contact with negative influences that they would avoid if away from the streets. It can lead them into a life of danger, exploitation, violence and crime which reduces their chance of a bright future.
More than 28% of Salvadorian street children report being abused by authorities with 51% of the injuries reported being beatings, and 20% cuts. Even with these injuries and threats, 78% of these children reported feeling safer on the streets than in their own homes (COTS).
More than 90% of the girls on the streets belong to gangs, which tend to prostitute them for money (COTS, 2001).
About 44% of the estimated 2,300 prostitutes in three major red light districts of San Salvador are between the ages of 13 and 18 (US Dept of State, Human Rights Report, 1999).

Capital: San Salvador
Population: 6.2 million (UN, 2009)
Population living below the poverty line: 30.7%
Area: 21,041 sq km (8,124 sq miles)
Major language: Spanish
Life expectancy: 67 yrs (men), 76 yrs (women) (UN)
Monetary unit: US dollar & Salvadorian colon
Main exports: Offshore assembly exports, coffee, sugar, shrimp, textiles, chemicals, electricity
External debt: $11.51 billion (CIA estimate)
Environmental issues: deforestation; soil erosion; water pollution; contamination of soils from disposal of toxic wastes, hurricanes and earthquakes
Even though the El Salvadorian government put in place important political reforms after the civil war and progress has been made, children still suffer from extreme poverty. Many children they die from preventable diseases that are caused by polluted drinking water. A large number have to work for a living.
More than 12,000 Salvadorian children aged 0-5 die each year from polluted drinking water and gastrointestinal diseases (Children of the Street, COTS).
A report from UNICEF indicates that about 1.8 million children between the ages of 5 and 17 actively participate in the Salvadorian labour market (US Dept of State, Human Rights Report, 1999).
According to the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) 80% of Salvadorian children suffer from cruelty.
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