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PROGRAM BRINGS HOPE TO VULNERABLE
ADOLESCENT GIRLS IN GUINEA
June 9, 2004 (International Rescue Committee)
The IRC has launched a program in eastern Guinea to provide vocational
and literacy training to vulnerable adolescent girls in refugee
camps and their host communities. Most of the girls participating
in the program have previously worked in the sex industry.
"The typical girl is around sixteen years old,
may be infected with HIV/AIDS, is illiterate, has no permanent home
and usually has at least one child already," says Rebecca Winthrop,
the IRC's education program manager. "The program combines
vocational training with counselling to help these young women cope
with their past experiences while developing new skills to change
their lives."
Through the program, the girls have started receiving
training in business management, computer literacy, English, French,
secretarial skills and tailoring. They also receive health education
courses and are supported in various small-scale income generation
activities.
The project is being implemented in Guinea's eastern
N'Zerekore region in conjunction with the local aid organization,
Today's Women International Network (TWIN). TWIN has been working
with young girls in this community since 2002. The group focuses
on preventing gender-based violence, HIV/AIDS transmission, female
genital mutilation and sexual exploitation.
As part of the IRC-sponsored program, TWIN's staff
members scan streets, bars, nightclubs and hotels to identify especially
vulnerable adolescents-mainly young women in the sex trade-and encourage
them to participate in the program.
"When my husband abandoned me with my children,
I felt forced to sell sex," explains 22-year old Juliana, who
is enrolled in a TWIN sewing class. "But TWIN has helped me
to stop the sex work. Their support has helped me feel strong and
to be a good mother to my children."
N'Zerekore is not only home to an estimated 50,000
refugees from war-torn Liberia and Cote d'Ivoire, but also houses
vast numbers of impoverished Guineans who are returning from Cote
d'Ivoire in large numbers.
"This area is poverty-stricken and suffers
from the kind of broken social fabric that comes with long-time
instability and conflict," Winthrop notes.
The program, which has so far assisted 200 women
and girls, is funded by the Alcoa Foundation, a global organization
that actively invests in improving the quality of life for populations
in need in more than 30 countries around the world.
The IRC has assisted refugees and host communities
in Guinea since 1991, with shelter, education, health care, psychosocial
assistance and tracing and reunification for war-separated families.
From: http://www.reliefweb.int/w/rwb.nsf/480fa8736b88bbc3c12564f6004c8ad5/8ecd0a567755f13949256eaf000655ec?OpenDocument
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