He added, "We are ready to collaborate further with the government, civil society, and community leaders to expand our outreach and continue providing the resources they need to thrive."
The centre which was constructed by Caritas in partnership with The Tree of Life organization and Bishops of Italy will serve as a rehabilitation centre, where the girls will be hosted for a short period before they are reintegrated back into the families and communities.
Through the children welfare program, archbishop Anyolo said the church is aligned with the government's agenda of advancing childcare reforms and also providing a return to family life and family care.
As part of the National Care Reform Strategy that seeks to transition children from Charitable Children Institutions to families and communities, the program seeks to rescue, rehabilitate, reintegrate and re-socialize the girls into families and communities.
The primary drivers of this growing crisis include family break-up, poverty, the HIV and AIDS pandemic and the increasing socio-economic pressures.
According to the Caritas Nairobi director Fr. Peter Kiarie, there is a similar program for the boys noting that the children are rescued from streets across the country.
At the centres, Kiarie said the children are debriefed, counselled, and de-intoxicated before undergoing vigorous training.
"We only hold them here for a short period. Then after that, we are able now to try and find their root, their families. The truth of the matter is every child has a parent," said Kiarie.
"When we identify those families, they take them but also offer support to the families to ensure they retain the child at home," he added.
The clergy called on people to open doors to the orphaned children being transitioned from the institutions.
The care reform strategy emanates from the belief that all children belong in a family, backed by overwhelming scientific evidence that children under institutional care suffer severe and sometimes irreversible developmental setbacks as opposed to those raised in families and communities.