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Chicago, Angola "My life is bad. I just shine. I want a proper job"

[Angola] Chicago, a 16-year old shoe-shine boy who makes his living polishing the shoes of passers-by. IRIN
Chicago.

Chicago is a 16-year old shoe-shine boy who makes his living polishing the shoes of passers-by.

"I can earn 400 or 500 kwanza [US $10] a day. I work from six o'clock in the morning until six o'clock at night - 12 hours every day. I don't think anything about the future. I'm not very happy but I have to work. My life is bad. I just [shoe] shine. I want a proper job.

"When I came to Luanda three years ago, I tried to study but it was expensive and I couldn't go to school and earn money at the same time. So I got a job shining shoes but now I can't study. I'm not happy, no, because I can't earn enough to get food. I'm short of food and I can't see the opportunity to change anything. I have only 10 kwanza and I'm hungry. I have nothing, nothing left except painful memories. We saw so much war. My mother and I left Bie province [the scene of much of the fighting] and came here, but my father stayed. I don't know what happened to him. My mother is sick, she's in the hospital so I stay with my uncle. I try to give my mother some money sometimes. My uncle helps and he feeds me when I go home to his house, but it's very, very difficult.

"I want to leave shoe-shining and find another job. If I could make enough money I would leave here and go back to Bie province because there has to be more opportunities there. This is no life, I feel it in my head and my heart. This is not living."


This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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