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innovation needed to protect the girl-child: a focus on rural empowerment
Chipo Chigumira
, Women in Development Southern Africa Awareness (WIDSAA)
Extracted from GAD Exchange Issue 33
July 05, 2004
http://www.sardc.net/Widsaa/Gad/Iss33/girlchild.htm
Southern
African countries need innovative measures to address the increasing
challenges hindering the protection of the girl-child in the regions
rural areas..
The girl-child
in southern Africa is faced with many challenges, which include
poverty, effects of HIV and AIDS, dropping out of school, commercial
sex work and child abuse.
The Beijing
Declaration and Platform for Action BPFA) mandates governments and
states to eliminate all forms of discrimination and abuses against
the girl-child, and to ensure that girls enjoy their rights in totality.
In the Southern
African Development Community SADC), six countries (Angola, Botswana,
Malawi, Mauritius, Namibia and Zambia) have identified issues affecting
the girl-child as a priority. However, the region still has insufficient
innovative programmes to effectively deal with the challenges of
girls in rural communities including those out of the formal education
systems and organised groups.
The Girl
Child Network Trust (GCNT) in Zimbabwe is an example of an innovative
approach to addressing the rights of girls in peri-urban and rural
communities, which can be replicated in other countries in the region.
Established
in 1999, the GCNT is a community-based organisation that provides
girls in formal and non-formal groups with survival skills including
self-empowerment awareness, sensitisation on HIV and AIDS, child
abuse and where to seek protection.
The approach
taken by many organisations in the region is that of addressing
girl-child issues through formal groups in schools and through youth
clubs, thereby leaving the majority of girls who are not in school
or do not belong to any organised group not catered for.
The non-existence
of organisations with specific focus on the rural girl-child outside
the formal socio-circles motivated GCNT to establish a Girls
Empowerment Village near Rusape, in a communal area in the eastern
part of Zimbabwe. The empowerment village, which was established
in 2002, has been providing services to rural girls, and especially
the ones who are out of school.
Besides operating
as a platform where various selfempowerment and survival skills
are offered to girls below the age of 16, the Empowerment Village
also serves as a safe home where abused girls seek help.
"Information
volunteers at the village assess each girls situation and
needs and identify resources that are affordable, accessible and
geographically convenient," explains GCNT Director and founder
member, Betty Makoni.
She added that
her organisation considers empowerment as the process of providing,
facilitating and instilling the means of addressing issues which
impede the full growth and development of the girl-child in all
spheres of life. The organisation makes an effort to provide useful
information to enable girls to help themselves.
As a result
of their programmes in the village, the number of girls who are
aware of their rights has increased and more are visiting the empowerment
village to report cases of abuse and seeking help.
Girls who have
been idling in the rural community are also using their earned entrepreneurial
skills to start income-generating activities, while those who left
school due to pregnancies have been motivated by the selfawareness
sensitisation to return to school.
Based on the
successes with the Rusape Girls Empowerment Village, GCNT has started
working towards replicating the approach in other rural areas. The
GCNT officials maintain that the need for rural girls to embrace
empowerment as a tool towards complete freedom now and in future
is inevitable.
The innovative
approach in addressing the issues affecting the rural girl-child
undertaken by the GCNT is a best practice that other countries in
southern Africa can emulate. Activities of the GCNT are also undertaken
in one rural high-density suburb, Chitungwiza, where 100 clubs with
an estimated membership of 10,000 girls have been established.
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