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2011 Annual Programme narrative report
Students and Youth Working on Reproductive Health Action Team (SAYWHAT)
February 09, 2012

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Executive Summary

The Students And Youth Working on Reproductive Health Action Team (SAYWHAT) is a student based movement that seeks to address sexual and reproductive health needs of students in tertiary institutions. Its interventions are designed around three broad and related strategies of Information and Knowledge sharing, Networking and Advocacy and Capacity building and Support provision.

The year 2011 saw an improved advocacy in SAYWHAT's work through engagement with policy makers including parliamentarians. The re-introduction of the student loans and the eventual debate on sanitary wear in parliament are some indicators of well-sustained advocacy that SAYWHAT has taken a lead on. As part of its lobbying for commodity provision SAYWHAT managed to mobilise 300 sanitary wear bins from UNFPA which shall be distributed in 7 colleges in Harare as a pilot.

2011 saw SAYWHAT's utilization of ICT's in SRHR interventions for students increasing and this includes its high presence online and high interactivity through social media. In 2011 alone SAYWHAT managed to send bulk SMS to 12 563 students across the country on different SRHR thematic areas.

The Web for Life which is an initiative of the Students' And Youth Working on reproductive Health Action Team has strengthened the active participation and involvement of female students in SRHR Advocacy at local, national and regional level in 2011.

The web for life capacitated female students through trainings and mentorship leading to increased understanding and knowledge on young women's sexual and reproductive health and rights and HIV, and ensured that these issues are part of the core business of youths' and women's organizations and movements.

To further move its vision for a gender-just society of students who fully enjoy their sexual and reproductive health and rights SAYWHAT introduced the Mugota/Men's Talk platform for male students' engagement into gender issues to compliment the web for life initiatives.

Towards its vision of support SAYWHAT through the PLUS project supported 27 students living with HIV with CD4 count test services and reached out to 707 males and 680 females through mobile VCT. The same project has initiated a positive circuit that has provided positive living mentorship to 17 students living with HIV. To generate reserves to support positive living advocacy, SAYWHAT in 2011 has initiated an income-generating project that generated a 30% profit margin in its first year alone.

The period under review has also seen SAYWHAT enhancing youth friendly service provision in four colleges through conducting a 5 day YFS management training to 54 participants who included HIV and AIDS Coordinators and college nurses. A 2 day coalition building training was conducted with 20 students from four colleges to enhance the capacity of the LCC structures to utilize locally available resources and networks that provide SRH services and information. SAYWHAT conducted 11 orientation programs in 11 colleges that reached out to 2661 and enhanced first year students` capacity to assess their risk to SRH challenges including HIV infection.

The year 2011 has seen positive results in the work of SAYWHAT and 2012 will only provide more space for consolidating the gains and ensure that students' participation remains central to the work that SAYWHAT does.

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