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RESOLUTION 1325
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SEX WORKERS GET VOCATIONAL TRAINING
September 15, 2003 (IRIN) Sex workers in
the Central African Republic completed on Saturday a five-day training
session on starting and managing alternative revenue-generating
activities, in an effort to help curb HIV/AIDS infection.
A local NGO, the Centre for Documentation, Information and Training,
conducted the training in Bangui, the capital, for 50 sex workers
from across the country. The official in charge of training, Bruno
Ndreyo, said the participants had been taught how to select business,
where to locate them and how to fix prices.
"I used to fix my prices without taking into account fees for
shipment, police and customs," Barbara Zoumbe-Kokot, a 27-year-old
mother of one, told IRIN.
She is a member of an association of 230 former sex workers in Berberati,
186 km west of Bangui. She now runs a cloths shop that she opened
in 2000 with 200,000 francs (US $416), and a 50,000-franc contribution
two years later from the UNDP. Her capital is now 450,000 francs
($750).
The UN Development Porgamme and the government's National Committee
Against AIDS funded the training programme.
An official of the UNDP anti-HIV/AIDS programme, Gustave Niakamatchi,
told IRIN on 24 August that another 100 sex workers in Bangui and
100 in Bouar (454 km north west of Bangui) had received 50,000 francs
each in March 2002 to start income-generating activities.
In June, former sex workers formed an anti-AIDS group known as the
Association des Filles Libres de Centrafrique contre le Sida. The
association, with 400 members in Bangui, has chapters in major towns.
A December 2002 study by the Pasteur Institute - a French medical
research body - said that 14.8 percent of the population was HIV-positive.
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200309150633.html
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