|
RESOLUTION 1325
Full text
History & Analysis
Who's Responsible for Implementation?
1325
Anniversary
TRANSLATING
1325
UNITED
NATIONS
Women
and the UN
Security Council (SC)
Gender & Peacekeeping
1325 Monitor: Women &
Gender in the work of the Security Council
Gender Focal Points
PeaceBuilding Commission
WOMEN, WAR &
PEACE WEB PORTAL
UNIFEM
PeaceWomen
JOIN WILPF

|
|
SUPPORT FOR GIRLS' EDUCATION
February 26, 2003 (IRIN) UNICEF has agreed
to provide Guinea-Bissau with assistance worth US $23 million under
a new five-year support and cooperation programme that will continue
until 2007. The programme will cover child protection, nutritional
health, primary education and functional literacy, and a social
communication policy, the programme's coordinator, Karim Alkadiri,
told IRIN.
The agreement was signed on Monday by UNICEF's country representative
in Guinea-Bissau, Sergio Guimaraes, and Foreign Minister Joaozinha
Vieira Co.
The programme will focus on the application of the rights of children
and adolescents with a view to protecting them through drug prevention,
awareness building, and HIV/AIDS control. It aims to improve the
treatment of victims of child trafficking and sexual exploitation,
and to fight against early marriages and female genital mutilation.
Its targets include getting more children in school, especially
girls, and teaching them about peace. About 38 percent of girls
in Guinea-Bissau go to school, according for statistics for the
period 1992-2001. An earlier programme run in regions with low education
rates - Gabou (east), Tombali (south) and Cachiau (north) - had
increased the number of girls in school by six percent each year,
Alkadiri said. He attributes some of the progress made under that
programme to the involvement of parents and local communities.
UNICEF hopes to help Guinea-Bissau strengthen its vaccination services,
provide children with Vitamin A, curb malaria and reduce iodine
deficiency through the four-pronged programme, which will also seek
to limit the spread of HIV/AIDS. There were 1,500 children aged
0 to 14 years living with HIV/AIDS in Guinea-Bissau by the end of
2001, according to UNICEF statistics.
The various initiatives are to be supported by a social and communication
policy aimed at helping to reduce child and maternal mortality,
and involving NGOs, media, local communities, youth and women's
groups, and traditional and religious leaders. The mortality rate
for children under the age of five years was 211 per 1000 in 2001,
according to UNICEF.
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200302260609.html
|
|
NEWS
1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Country News Index
International News
Peacekeeping News
RESOURCES
Country
& Thematic
Civil Society, UN & Government
1325
Advocacy Tools
INITIATIVES
In-country
Regional and Global
1325 in Action
ORGANIZATIONS
Country-specific
International
LATEST
PEACEWOMEN UPDATES
PEACEWOMEN
NGO WEB RING
Women, Peace &
Security Community representing the diversity and depth of research, organizing
and advocacy on women, peace and security issues.
|