Source: Mmegi Online
The Minister of Trade and Industry, Dorcus Makgato-Malesu revealed over the weekend that of 5,441 farmers who took part in the just ended farming season in Kgatleng, 3,181 were women.


"I think this one is interesting-that more women are actually taking up farming compared to men," she said. She however was worried that lack of rainfall and high temperatures will result in low yields. She also said that social welfare programmes were beginning to bear fruit in the district with 47 beneficiaries registered under economic empowerment and rehabilitation programmes.

"This is a good thing. Although none of the beneficiaries has exited social safety net programmes, there are some who have shown commitment to their projects," she noted. Kgatleng already has 10 horticulture (backyard gardens) and three poultry projects. She further revealed that the training of handy-persons is ongoing.

"The main objective of this training is to equip individual destitute persons or potential destitute persons with skills to erect net shades, install water tanks and water pipes to reticulate water throughout the garden," she said.
The district also has 14 backyard nurseries, and assessments of those who could benefit from the poverty eradication programme are yet to be done.  "Beneficiaries will be assisted to procure material for nurseries established under a budget of P14,825 per person," she said.

She added that the Department of Social Welfare and Development is in the process of identifying beneficiaries who will also receive technical assistance. She was delighted to announce that 19 destitutes sold 35,685 blocks and bricks to make P134,367 since April last year.

"This is a very good achievement considering that one has already completed a one-roomed house up to the roof stage. Another beneficiary has completed a one-roomed house through income generated from the project," she said.

Malesu was speaking at a market day organised by the Kgatleng district. Small business owners from sectors such as nurseries, bee keeping, sewing, knitting, catering, poultry and many others, attended the market day to sell their products and meet fellow business people to share experiences.

 

Source: Global Press Institute
The Talking Box, an initiative for girls in Nairobi’s Kibera slum, invites students to write down concerns that they are afraid to discuss with their teachers or parents. Educators say it’s reducing school dropouts and improving academic performances.

It is 2:30 p.m. in Kibera, Kenya’s largest slum. The sun is vengefully hot, and foreheads are polka-dotted with sweat droplets.

A 5-foot-5-inch figure wearing a green and white checkered dress, matching socks and a red sweater approaches from the shade. With each step the shadowy figure takes, the bright sunshine reveals the face of a smiling young girl. She cradles a wooden box in her sturdy arms like a newborn.

"When I do something wrong my father tells me to take all my clothes off and he beats me naked."

Rebecca Apiyo, 14, is in her final year of primary school at Adventure Pride Centre, a nonformal school, or school run by a nongovernmental or community-based organization in an informal settlement like Kibera. She is the head prefect and also the student in charge of the Talking Box at her school.

The Talking Box is a program started by Polycomdev, a local community-based organization in Kibera. It provides pupils an opportunity to share challenges that they are afraid to discuss so that adults can address them.

The children write down their concerns on pieces of paper and slip them into the sealed dark mahogany box. Every two weeks, the Polycomdev team of volunteers collects the challenges that have been neatly folded and submitted to the boxes.

The team prepares quarterly reports for each school based on the contents of the notes. It then discusses the challenges mentioned by the students with their teachers. In serious cases, the volunteers directly seek out the students themselves to address the issues.

The team is also in the process of consolidating all of the reports to submit to the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Development at the end of the year.

Rebecca says that the Talking Box helps girls to voice their concerns because some of them don’t know how to approach their parents about their essential needs.

“Some girls only live with their fathers,” she says, “and he is male, and some find it hard to ask for things like sanitary towels. They think it is bad.”

But she encourages her peers to trust in their parents and speak to them about their concerns.

Rebecca’s mother, Francissa Apiyo, 46, says that all parents should know about the Talking Box project. She says that parents should change their approach to raising their children in order to make the home more conducive for children to voice their concerns.

She says this will have a positive effect on education. Once the children speak up about what bothers them, they can focus on their studies better.

“Children of today were born with their own wisdom,” she says. You have to talk to them and reason with them.”

The Talking Box program strives to give young students, especially girls, a chance to voice their concerns in a less daunting platform. Concerns range from their families’ inability to pay school fees to revelations of abuse and neglect. Educators say the program is reducing school dropouts and improving academic performance for girls.

According to the Kenya Independent Schools Association, 40 percent of the 1.5 million residents of the Kibera slum are children.

Children from poor, urban neighborhoods are less likely to attend school, according to UNICEF’s State of the World’s Children 2012 Report. Even in countries that offer free primary education, such as Kenya, ancillary costs such as school uniforms, classroom stationery or even exam fees make education an unaffordable cost for families in poor areas.


Girls especially face extra obstacles to education, from lack of sanitation facilities and sanitary napkins to teenage pregnancy, according to a 2008 report by the Centre for the Study of Adolescence.

Kennedy Oduol, principal of Adventure Pride Centre, says that the Talking Box program provides female students especially an opportunity to speak up about various challenges they face.

“Most of the girls were being molested at home,” he says, providing one example. “And at school, the teachers were harsh on them trying to complete the [education] syllabus.”

The school then addresses these challenges. For example, it forwarded the molestation cases to the Department of Children’s Services under the Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Development. In the process of voicing and addressing concerns, Oduol says the program has built the students’ self-esteem.

And it is not only the girls benefiting from the program, though it has been geared toward them.

George Miheso, 12, is also a student at Adventure Pride Centre. He seems dwarfed by his oversized uniform, and he is soft-spoken. But he has an intense stare. His eyes seem to speak for him.

“When I came to school, I was afraid to talk to others,” he says.

But once George was able to write down his concerns and submit them to the Talking Box, things changed. He teachers worked with him on his shyness, and he says he now feels more confident.

“I can now stand in front of the class and write answers on the blackboard,” George says enthusiastically.

Oduol says that boys have also used the program as a tool to help their families. For example, Danson Karime says he wrote notes about his sister’s and his neighbor’s needs for feminine products and signed their names to them because they were too shy to ask their parents.

Anyango says that the program has mostly targeted girls. But boys have also voiced interest in a similar program geared toward them, so she is working with other organizations with the capacity to develop something specifically for the boys.

Polycomdev introduced the Talking Box program in January 2011 and now runs it in 10 schools, nearly all of which are in Kibera. Jane Anyango, founder of Polycomdev and the Talking Box program, says that the experiences of her teenage niece compelled her to begin addressing issues facing girls. Her 13-year-old niece wasn’t able to talk to her freely about her dislike for the neglect she faced both before and after she began an intimate relationship with and married a middle-aged man.

From this experience, Anyango began to periodically invite girls in her neighborhood to discuss the things that challenged them. She soon saw that there was a stronger need to reach more girls.

“I felt like schools were the best place to reach girls,” she says. “Because they can talk more freely away from home.”

Every two weeks, a team of volunteers collects the boxes’ contents from each school. Some concerns are stationery and uniform requests from children whose parents can’t afford them.

“My family is poor and I need books and pencils for school,” reads one anonymous note. Please help me.”

Other notes cry of abuse and neglect.

“My father does inappropriate things to me,” reads another anonymous note. “When I do something wrong my father tells me to take all my clothes off and he beats me naked, and I am a 13 year old girl.”

Anyango and her team tried to trace the author of this note, but they were not able to reach her.

“These young girls need someone to talk to,” Anyango says. “They go through so much, and some parents are not understanding.”

Anyango acknowledges that some parents will never change.

“Unless the parent has God in their heart, I don't think they will change to make it easier to talk to their children,” she says.

But she hopes that the Talking Box initiative can help give these children voices.

Oduol says that school dropouts have decreased since the inception of the Talking Box program, although he didn’t have data to verify this trend. Oduol says that girls in his school start dropping out in the middle to upper classes, when most are between the ages of 11 and 15.

“Most are cheated by boys and end up pregnant,” Oduol says. “Others act as mothers at home.”

Oduol says these children must run their households while parents work outside the home to earn money to support the family. Oduol doesn’t have official statistics on the dropout rates in his school, but he says that there is a trend.

“It is a 10-percent reduction up to the end,” he says, meaning that 30 percent of girls drop out between fifth grade and eighth grade.

The Municipal Education Office is the government office in charge of monitoring the implementation of free primary education in schools at district level. Schools in Kibera slum fall under Lang’ata district, which is led by George Letema. The district doesn’t have dropout records, he says.

“Nonformal schools are required to bring their records, but they don’t,” Letema says.

Oduol remains optimistic that the Talking Box program has been reducing dropouts because it enables students to speak up about the challenges standing in their way of receiving an education. He says the initiative has also improved students’ openness in class discussions. This has improved the academic performances of especially the girls, whom the program targets.

Last year, one of his primary school students gained sponsorship for high school from CARE International Kenya for her academic achievement. Several female students scored highly on the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education exams, which are scored out of 500 points.

“Last year, we had several girls scoring over 300 marks,” Oduol says with excitement.

 

by Rose Odengo, GPI

Source: The Point
WANEP Gambia, under its Women and Peacebuilding programme (WIPNET), joined forces with women and men of Lower River Region to mark International Women’s Day on 27April at the Agricultural Rural Farmer Training Centre in Jenoi, Lower River Region, on the theme “Women in Decision Making’’, supported by Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) through WANEP Regional office.

Source: The Zimbabwean
Aspiring female politicians have lambasted the existing political structures as the major barrier to women taking up positions of leadership and participating actively in politics. In an interview with The Zimbabwean, Director of Zimbabwe Organisation for Youths in Politics, Nkosilathi Moyo, who is also the Project Coordinator of Democratic Agenda, said aspiring female politicians felt disadvantaged by existing political situations.

Source: IRIN
Twelve years gone, and three years still to go: as the Millennium Development Goals’ (MDG) target date of 2015 gets closer, the debate is intensifying about what went right and what went wrong, and – perhaps more importantly – what kind of goals should be set for the future.

Source: GhanaWeb
Mrs. Afia Serwaa Asante Botwe, Principal Attorney at the Brong-Ahafo Regional Office of the Attorney General’s Department, has entreated women to impress on their spouses to avoid utterances that could mar peace during the December polls.

Source: IRIN
The Somali Athletics Federation will select one female runner from a field of 10 to compete in the 400-metres at this year's London Olympics. The youngest of those currently training in Mogadishu is Najma, 10. She started running six months ago, shortly after Al-Shabab left the city. “My father

Source: All Africa

REGARDLESS of their educational qualifications,Nigerian women not only occupy fewer positions in the public sector, but earn consistently less income than their male counterparts.

Source: Allafrica
Her limbs flaccid, her eyes wide with fear and pain, Théthé's cries seem oddly detached from her body, as if part of her isn't lying on a brown vinyl mattress, slick with blood and amniotic fluid, in one of the worst places in the world to be a mother.The final hours of Théthé's pregnancy have been difficult. Her placenta has torn away from her uterus and her child is being starved of oxygen. In the meantime, Théthé has developed a fever.

Source: AllAfrica
Saratu Dauda Aliyu, a 26 year old native of Nasarawo quarters in Gombe metropolis was until recently unaware about the scourge of HIV and AIDS other than a radio jingle being aired intermittently on the local radio and television. She's neither aware about ways of contracting the disease nor means of protecting herself against it.

Source: The Independent 
Debate between traditional norms and progressive practices intensifies after first national abortion study

Source: The Independent Debate between traditional norms and progressive practices intensifies after first national abortion study

Source: Human Rights Watch
South Africa’s new campaign to reduce maternal mortality is an important step to address a serious problem, but accountability will be the key to making it work, Human Rights Watch said today. The campaign is aimed at reducing the number of women who die needlessly from preventable and treatable causes linked to pregnancy and childbirth.

Source: allAfrica
It's called "the bearing of the body" in Burkina Faso: when a death is deemed suspicious and a group of men carry the corpse through the community, believing the deceased will guide them towards the person responsible for the death. The accused - almost always women - are then chased out of their homes.

Source: New Era
Next Saturday at least 1000 men will join hands in a planned march in support of men for healthy relationships and against an upsurge in gender-based violence (GBV).

Source: Sowetan
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Source: The Guardian
Niger
is the worst country on earth in which to be a mother, according to a report by Save the Children. The charity's annual Mothers' Index uses statistics covering female and child health and nutrition, as well as prospects for women's education, economic prosperity and political participation in its assessment of 165 countries.

Source: Global Press Institute
Nancy Acieng stands outside the door of Pride Microfinance Limited, a bank in Kampala, Uganda's capital. A fairly educated woman, she works hard to earn money selling fresh food and fruit from a roadside stall.

Source: Cameroon Tribune
Women in Cameroon, according to the Women's Economic Opportunity Index (WEOI) 2012, can still not fully exercise their rights businesses and some employments. The index places Cameroon at the 114th position on the overall rankings table of 128 countries the world over, featuring 30 in a list of 39 Lower Middle Income countries and at the 14th position out of 21 Sub-Saharan Africa countries.

Source: The Namibian
WITH the launch of the Fertility Clinic in Windhoek last month, In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF) is at long last becoming a reality in Namibia.

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