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UK
invests £22 million to improve the lives of Zimbabwe's orphans
and vulnerable children
United Nations Chidrens Fund (UNICEF)
April 11, 2006
http://www.unicef.org/media/media_33266.html
NEW YORK / LONDON
/ HARARE - The UK's Department for International Development (DFID)
has given £22 million to the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) in Zimbabwe
in a bid to improve the plight of orphans and vulnerable children
across the country.
"Almost one
in three children in Zimbabwe, 1.6 million, are now orphaned, having
lost at least one parent, and this number is growing," UNICEF Executive
Director Ann M. Veneman said. "HIV and AIDS have dramatically increased
children's vulnerability in recent years."
The funding
from DFID - the largest ever to UNICEF in Zimbabwe - will help deliver
a national plan of action for orphans and vulnerable children.
"This generous
contribution will help us achieve one of the four main goals of
the "Unite for Children, Unite Against AIDS" global campaign - to
protect and support children affected by HIV/AIDS," Veneman said.
UNICEF convened
"Unite for Children, Unite against AIDS" to highlight and address
the effects of HIV/AIDS pandemic on children and to work towards
Millennium Development Goal (MDG) 6 - to halt and begin to reverse
the spread of the disease by 2015. In addition to protecting and
supporting children who have lost parents to the disease, the campaign
aims to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission, provide paediatric
treatment and prevent infection among adolescents and young people.
As part of Zimbabwe's
National Plan of Action (NPA) for orphans and vulnerable children,
UNICEF is embarking on a massive programme to improve the health,
education, protection and nutrition of the country's orphans and
vulnerable children. The National Plan has the support of the highest
levels of government, as well as the United Nations and civil society
in Zimbabwe.
The funds from
DFID will go towards: . Increasing school enrolment of orphans and
vulnerable children . Family and community support . School nutrition
programmes . Increasing the number of children with birth certificates
. Increasing access to food, health services, water and sanitation
. Reducing the number of children living outside a family environment.
. Reducing physical abuse of orphans
UK Secretary
of State for International Development Hilary Benn said, "New data
shows that the number of orphans in Zimbabwe will rise even after
the number of adults infected with HIV starts to decline. It's now
essential to put programmes in place to ensure these children have
somewhere to live, enough to eat, healthcare and education. Today's
funding from the UK Government will help UNICEF reach these most
vulnerable of children."
"We are grateful
to DFID for their continued support of UNICEF's work," said Veneman.
"These funds will make possible programmes critical to the health
and well being of a growing population of children left on their
own in Zimbabwe."
Despite the
country's much-publicised economic collapse, Zimbabweans continue
to lead by example in their care for the country's orphans and vulnerable
children. More than 90 per cent of the country's orphans have been
absorbed by the extended family. Two in five households in the poorest
areas of rural Zimbabwe care for orphans and other vulnerable children.
And yet until now, less than half of all these rural households
received any form of free external support in the past year.
The NPA for
orphans and vulnerable children now calls upon the private sector
and international donors to provide resources; community-based organizations
and traditional leaders to support Child Protection Committees at
the village, district and provincial level; and parents, teachers,
children and church members to work to educate their peers, colleagues
and congregations about the NPA, and then push for its success.
All money to
Zimbabwe from the UK government goes through UN agencies and Non-Governmental
Organisations. The funds from DFID, in addition to £2m given to
UNICEF last year, will be distributed over four years. They come
as Zimbabwean children are faced with some of the worst hardships
confronting children anywhere in the world. These include:
- A child
is orphaned every 20 minutes in Zimbabwe .
- One in eight
children now die before the age of five compared with one in
- 13 children
15 years ago
- Three infants
become infected with HIV every hour .
- Every 20
minutes a child dies of AIDS in Zimbabwe
Hilary Benn
added: "Anyone who has seen the hardships of these orphans and the
resolve and determination of struggling Zimbabweans to assist them
must be moved to help. In UNICEF we have a partner who is reaching
out to orphans across the country. I hope others will now join us."
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