| |
Back to Index
ZIMBABWE:
Action plan set to help orphans
IRIN
News
June 18, 2004
Http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=41780
HARARE - In
an effort to respond to the ballooning orphan crisis, the Zimbabwean
government is set to launch a national plan of action for orphans
and vulnerable children (OVCs), officials told a national conference
on HIV and AIDS this week.
As the growing number of children losing parents to AIDS undermines
already overstretched communities and extended families, the plan
aims to provide a framework for interventions for OVCs to ensure
that laws protecting children are enforced.
The main areas of focus are education for OVCs, support to child-headed
households and issues around foster care.
Presenting the preliminary findings to the conference of a rapid
assessment on OVCs, Joyce Makufa of the development agency Catholic
Relief Services, said one of the major realisations was that the
national response had so far been inadequate in addressing "the
scale and level of needs and rights of vulnerable children. Even
at government level, the data on orphans and vulnerable children
is inadequate to make informed decisions." Government figures of
over a million orphans are believed to under-estimate the extent
of the crisis.
AIDS orphans face huge problems of poverty and stigma, and are often
deprived of school fees, food, clothing and sometimes shelter by
their "guardians". Children who have lost parents to AIDS also suffer
psychological scarring, and are vulnerable to physical, psychological
and sexual abuse, experts say.
Greg Pouwels, a paediatrician working with the Ministry of Health
and Child Welfare, welcomed the government's action plan. "Programmes
on orphans and vulnerable children in Zimbabwe have been largely
uncoordinated and chaotic, and at last we are seeing government
efforts to respond to the crisis," he said.
Makufa pointed out that the government's initiative should be anchored
within the community as a more sustainable way of caring for orphans.
With over 98 percent of orphans in the country looked after by the
extended family, she said the national response should strengthen
community efforts.
"The national plan of action should provide a mechanism to channel
small amounts of funding to formal and informal community groups
working with orphans," Makufa suggested.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|