Tag: women
AWDF Co-Founder Launches New Blog Above Whispers
AWDF Co-Founder Launches New Blog Above Whispers
AWDF Co-founder Bisi Adeleye-Fayemi has launched a new blog targeted at mature audiences.
Above Whispers is a space “primarily, (but not exclusively) for middle-aged women, and will provide an opportunity for people to engage in discussions about a range of issues such as politics, social justice, development, financial security, women’s rights, health, entrepreneurship, popular culture, faith, parenting and relationships.”
It hopes to offer a unique platform to engage with other people in an atmosphere of mutual respect.
Click here to read Bisi’s response to Nigerian writer Olatunji Ololade’s article on African Feminists “Beasts Of No Gender, The Nation.”
Bisi Adeleye- Fayemi, a feminist activist, philanthropist, social entrepreneur and writer, is one of AWDF’s co-founders.
Women Lead The Charge In Post-Ebola Guinea
Women Lead The Charge In Post-Ebola Guinea
CONAKRY, Guinea – A women’s cooperative saw its work almost reduced to ashes after years of work as the Ebola outbreak ravaged the West African country of Guinea, but the women would have the last say.Djakagbe Kaba has spent decades working towards women empowerment. Despite the setbacks during the Ebola outbreak, she is determined to reposition women at the forefront of agricultural development and lead the way to better earning power.
The women cannot be independent if they do not have the means
It is Friday in Conakry and the streets are busy. Vendors are selling their wares as passers-by haggle over prices, afternoon prayers at the mosque have already begun.
Amidst the hustle and bustle, Djakagbe Kaba, head of the women’s organisation AGACFEM (Association Guineenne pour L’Allegement des Charges Feminines), opens the boutique where the organisation sells locally-made products produced by the women they work with.
The shop is modest but Kaba is confident. She has spent the last 30 years working with women’s groups before she co-founded the AGACFEM in 1995. With a focus on training and women’s economic and political empowerment, AGACFEM has supported thousands of women living in the country’s rural areas.
One of the organisation’s early projects was a women’s leadership programme after receiving funds from the Accra-based African Women’s Development Fund (AWDF). Kaba and her team organised trainings for women to participate in local governance. By the end of the project seven women were elected as members of the municipal council.
But AGACFEM did not stop there. The programme extended to illiterate women, who were taught how to read and write and the importance of voting.
In recent times AGACFEM has pooled together a co-operative of 45 women’s groups in the rural areas Kissidougou, Guéckédou and Kankan. The Coopérative des Femmes Rurales pour l’Agriculture, la Souveraineté Alimentaire et le Développement (COFRASAD) spent the last four years training women in 10 villages in organic agricultural production and value-added processing and are currently in the process of completing the finishing touches to two processing centres. But when the Ebola virus hit in 2014 everything changed.
Kaba and her colleagues were forced to re-strategise. AGACFEM received another grant from the AWDF, this time for the fight against Ebola. The organisation decided to team up with three other Guinean NGOs – Coalition des Organisations pour le Rayonnement de L’Economie Sociale Solidaire en Guinee (CORESS), Cooperative Badembere and Association des Jeunes Agriculteurs pour le Developpement Communautaire (AJADEG) – some of whom are members of COFRASAD working in the same region that also received grants from AWDF during the Ebola crisis to put their funds together to tackle the crisis head on.
Kaba decided to leave the capital, Conakry, and base herself in Kissidougou for three months to ensure all the programmes ran efficiently. While she headed the project planning and budget organising, roles were allocated to her partners to ensure that they maximised their efforts and networks as they reached to villages across the region.
“When it came to making orders for hand-washing kits, we placed one order together to keep costs down.” Kaba points out that it was important to her that each organisation used its strengths. “For example,” she says. “Badembere is an organisation that manufactures soap, so we thought let’s put the money we have each been allocated to buy soap into Badembere to strengthen their capacities.”Kaba bought and bargained every item needed for the hand-washing kits, even down to the stickers on the bucket, to make sure the group got the best for their buck. After overseeing the manufacturing process, the kits would then go out to the villages with the women volunteers who were spreading the message about Ebola.
Though Kaba and her colleagues were successful in their efforts in distributing hand-washing kits across communities, raising hygiene awareness and communicating with people, the work they had been doing in agricultural production took a hit. Nothing was produced for a whole year, setting the whole project back.
“We had to stop production,” says Fanta Konneh Condé, the secretary general of COFRASAD and one of Kaba’s colleagues, as she overlooks one of the gardens in just outside Kissidougou. “We missed the harvest season.”
Fast-forward to December 2015 and work has restarted. Condé and her colleague, Mariame Touré of Badembere take a stroll through the garden, stopping to talk to the women, as they remark at how far they all have come. With babies on their backs and farming tools in their hands, some of the women are – for the time being – cultivating carrots, lettuce and chives. Once again working to provide for their families. Under the initiative, they also produce rice, cereals and potatoes.
Back in Conakry at the boutique, Kaba is sure of the direction she wants the co-operative to go.
“We want to increase production,” she declares, as she gestures towards the pots of shea butter and black soap on the shelves. “We would like to export these products.”
COFRASAD is expanding rapidly having grown from a co-operative of four groups after its first year, to 45 groups today, four years later.
“The women cannot be independent if they do not have the means,” Kaba says. “It is better to support a group of women, rather than just one.”
Read the original article on Theafricareport.com : Women lead the charge in post-Ebola Guinea | West Africa
ACSHR 2016 Accra, Ghana: Pre Conference – Foundations of African Feminism
ACSHR 2016 Accra, Ghana: Pre Conference – Foundations of African Feminism
AWDF facilitated a women’s only pre-conference session for the 7th Africa Conference on Sexual Health and Rights which took place in Accra, Ghana, from 8-12 February, 2016.
The meeting was jointly held with Curious Minds, Ghana, which acted as secretariat and conference host for this year’s gathering. AWDF wanted to provide a safe platform for an intimate and in-depth discussion of sexual and reproductive health and rights of adolescents and youth. Aimed primarily at 15 – 30-year old women, it ended up being a mixed age group of both genders, which ignited some fiery discussion. But at the end of the day everyone agreed it had been worthwhile.
“We wanted to provide a safe space for young women to discuss the issues relevant to them around issues of SRHR,” said AWDF’s donor liaison specialist Joan Koomson.
The pre-conference session also looked at helping young women develop common strategies and messages on engaging effectively with issues during the conference, influencing outcomes and how to derive the maximum benefit from being there.
A Position Statement (see below), worked on at the close of the day’s activities, was presented at the opening session of the main conference held Feb. 11. It summed up the major concerns and aspirations of the young women.
Takeaway:
“Negotiating the space to have young women’s issues represented with government is a priority,” said Catherine Nyambura.
World Health Organization Declares Ebola Outbreak Over In West Africa
World Health Organization Declares Ebola Outbreak Over In West Africa
January 14, 2016 – Today, the World Health Organization (WHO), declared the end of the most recent outbreak of Ebola virus disease in Liberia and says all known chains of transmission have been stopped in West Africa.
It’s a day to celebrate, yet the consequences of this outbreak – the worst the world has ever known, are devastating: over 11,000 deaths out of 28,000 infections in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, the three worst affected countries, and economies and lives shattered.
Liberia was first declared free of Ebola transmission in May 2015, but the virus was re-introduced twice since then, with the latest flare-up in November. The last confirmed patient in Liberia has tested negative for the disease following two consecutive 21 day incubation cycles of the disease.
“More flare-ups are expected and that strong surveillance and response systems will be critical in the months to come,” WHO said in a statement.
For us at AWDF who have been deeply involved with assisting women’s groups from the start of the epidemic, the welfare of women must continue to be a priority for local, government and regional leaders. The critical support which will be needed to get families back on their feet, children in school and health systems running, must not be denied.
“We need support for the women affected by Ebola and those involved in the fight,” says Djakagbe Kaba, who heads the Association Guineenne pour L’Allegement des Charges (AGACFEM), an AWDF grantee which was instrumental in coordinating Ebola prevention and education efforts in Kissidougou, one of the worst affected areas.
“After Ebola I hope we can help women resume their work in soap-making and agricultural production. Though the epidemic has passed, we must still be observant and remind people to always wash their hands. Preventive measures must continue,” Kaba said.
All our efforts will be needed in the months to come to ensure that the necessary prevention, surveillance and response capacity across all three countries are put in place and that more women are ready to shoulder responsibility in these efforts. Please make a donation now.
16 Days Of Activism: November 25 – December 10, 2015
16 Days Of Activism: November 25 – December 10, 2015
The United Nations defines violence against women as “Any act of gender-based violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual or mental harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or in private life.”
“Hannah was raped. It does not end there. Hannah was disembodied; skull fractured, glue found in her eyes, broken bones in multiple areas of her body, her spinal cord – shattered. When Hannah was found, only a pink brassiere covered the top part of her body. Her legs were sprawled apart, the only cover came from the beach’s sand and seaweed. Hanna was raped and her murder, an inhumane act of violence.” – Fatou Wurie – CEO Conceptor, Innovator of The Survivor Dream Project, Sierra Leone
Fatou’s chilling account of a brutally murdered teenager found on a beach in the Sierra Leone capital this August was particularly disturbing because it appeared to highlight an alarming rise in the number of unsolved assaults on women and young girls in the west African nation. The incident led to a massive street protest by activists and civil society groups calling on the government to take a stand and to halt the violence.
“Hannah’s death reminds us all that women’s bodies in Sierra Leone are under heavy siege. That Sierra Leone’s highly patriarchal society still subjugates with structural discrimination in practice, custom, and law, with a plethora of women still facing suppression in education, employment and politics. Sexual violence has always been rampant in Sierra Leone – the rhetoric that Ebola has induced a spike in sexual violence undermines the reality that little has been done to improve social and economic options for women.” – Fatou Wurie
In Ghana, women make up just over half of the population, yet they still play a subservient role to men despite the constitution guaranteeing equal roles. According to the Gender Studies and Human Rights Documentation Centre, under our customary systems women are expected to give precedence to men in all things creating a position where Ghanaian women are equated to children…this has meant that many women have accepted the situation which allows men to “punish” them for their alleged disobedience.
Daily reports of murder, abduction and rape or defilement of women and minors, a member of Parliament’s remarks about punishing adulterous women and two high-profile alleged rape cases involving media celebrities, are a painful reminder of the distance we still have to cover in order to push against the denigration of women, persistent disregard for women’s sexual and personal rights and the prejudices and injustices suffered by women corageous enough to charge men with rape.
Last December Daboya Mankarigu Nelson Abudu Baani, a member of parliament in northern Ghana spoke against a new intestate succession bill saying that it could cause “customary anarchy” and recommended that women who cheat on their spouses be stoned or hanged. The bill was aimed at giving more rights to women with regards to the property of their deceased husbands.
His remarks were condemned by women’s rights activists and members of the public who called for his resignation but he refused to do so, clinging to his seat until he lost a re-election bid this past weekend.
Nineteen year old Ewuraffe Orleans Thompson accused Ghanaian television celebrity Kwesi Kyei Darkwa of raping her in a hotel bathroom in March, but withdrew her case against him a few weeks later, citing pressure from the media frenzy the story generated.
A few weeks later, a radio presenter’s report of her abduction and gang rape, while pictures of her nude body allegedly taken during the rape were circulated widely on the internet, caused a similar furor. The abduction story was condemned by the government and caused public outcry, but a police investigation into the case of Miss Ada, a popular host of YFM radio station in the western, ran into problems when she was unable to provide evidence for her abduction.
What all three incidents had in common were the profusion of hateful, sexist and misogynistic reactions they generated among the Ghanaian public.
Elsewhere on the continent, comments by Grace Mugabe, wife of Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe last week, sparked off a twitter stream of protest.
“If you walk around wearing mini skirts displaying your thighs and inviting men to drool over you, then you want to complain when you have been raped? It’s unfortunate because it will be your fault,’ Grace Mugabe said during a political rally this month.
As we join in the UN’s 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence Campaign this year, we invite you to tell your stories, highlight atrocities in your countries and tweet your comments, opinions and thoughts to our website, facebook page or twitter feed @awdf01 using the hashtags: #orangetheworld #16days
Sincerely,
Amba Mpoke-Bigg AWDF, Communications and Fundraising Specialist
Key Dates during the 16 days campaign:
- November 25: The International Day For the Elimination of Violence Against Women
- December 1: World AIDS Day
- December 3: International Day for Persons with Disabilities
- December 10: International Human Rights Day
Every year AWDF supports women’s groups over the continent to highlight the 16 Days campaign with a small grant. This ensures that we are are constantly keeping the fire burning and fulfilling one of our main missions of advocacy and the promotion of women’s rights.
AWDF will also support initiatives by women’s groups to address the stigma and discrimination against women living with HIV-AIDS. This year we are proud to support 40 organizations in their campaigns to mark 16 Days and World AIDS Day
Grantee Highlight: Sixty-Nine Women Graduate from NEWIG’s Youth-in-Entrepreneurship Initiative
Grantee Highlight: Sixty-Nine Women Graduate from NEWIG’s Youth-in-Entrepreneurship Initiative
This story was originally posted on Graphic Online (Ghana)
Sixty-nine young women have graduated from a three-month intensive training in vocational skills under the Youth-in-Entrepreneurship initiative.
The initiative, which forms part of the Network of Women in Growth-Ghana’s (NEWIG) project, seeks to empower young women to be gainfully employed to make them self-reliant.
They were trained in bead making, basic catering, soap making, batik, tie-dye, floral arrangement, textile designing and basic financial management.
At an event held at Tefle in the Volta Region on October 2, 2015 on the theme, “Promoting sustainable economic development through skills training for women”, the young ladies were presented with tools that would help them set up their own businesses.
The Executive Director of NEWIG, Mrs Mawusi Nudekor Awity, announced that approximately $21,000 was used in the training programme.
“Things haven’t been easy. But we believe in squeezing water out of stones to empower these young ladies. Of course, we received support from Empower, British High Commission, Crossroads International, and African Women’s Development Fund,” she said.
Mrs Awity said the NEWIG initiative used local raw materials such as coconut, cocoa pods, shea butter, paper, empty sachet water packets to create products.
According to her, there is the need to encourage the setting up of cottage industries in parts of the country, to propagate the idea of domestication through patronage of local produce.
A Senior Field Officer of NEWIG, Ms Naomi Biney, said NEWIG had a monitoring mechanism to help the graduates grow their businesses.
For his part, the Head of Rural Enterprise Programmes at Sogakope, Mr Eric Batse, said: “Small Scale Enterprises (SMEs) account for 90 per cent of the total operations in the industrial sector and offer 58 per cent of employment in the country.”
He said encouraging the growth of SMEs was a viable means of tackling the growing unemployment problem in the country.
Meanwhile, the District Coordinating Director for South Tongu, Mrs Jemima Apedo, has underscored the need for attitudinal change on the part of some Ghanaians who have insatiable taste for foreign produce, which she described as a bane of local economic growth.
AWDF SPECIAL FOCUS ON EBOLA AND WOMEN: Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea – One Year Later
AWDF SPECIAL FOCUS ON EBOLA AND WOMEN: Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea – One Year Later
After more than a year of unimaginable suffering, West Africa looks cautiously ahead to the end of the most devastating outbreak of the Ebola virus the world has ever known. Yet the road for the three worst affected countries is still one of tough challenges.
Whilst Liberia is celebrating a second round of being declared Ebola-free, the announcement of new cases in Sierra Leone this week is seen as a real setback to national efforts to get rid of the disease. The new outbreaks, in the northern part of the country have led to a fresh round of enforced quarantines for thousands of people.
The first case of Ebola broke out in Guinea in December 2013, but the disease went undetected for four months until it crossed the border into neighbouring Sierra Leone, reaching its peak in August 2014. To date Ebola has claimed over 11,200 lives in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea. Thousands of others died of other causes due to the shutdown of emergency and regular health care services as hospitals closed their doors in the wake of the epidemic.
At AWDF, our Ebola relief support for 52 women’s organizations in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea, underscores our concern for women who play the role of frontline responders in emergency situations on our continent. Within weeks of the outbreak we disbursed $450,000 to these women’s groups in the three countries.
Given the brutal impact on their already battered economies and the acute shortage of healthcare professionals, getting the countries completely Ebola-free and restoring what remains of virtually non-existent healthcare infrastructure will require the efforts of regional and national governments, individuals and the international community.
Early evidence from this outbreak has shown that women were disproportionately affected. Women’s livelihoods, security and lives came under direct assault as the epidemic waged its war.
For the next two weeks, we would like to salute the courage of the healthcare professionals, doctors, workers and ordinary everyday citizens who survived the unimaginable and through whose efforts the halt in the epidemic’s advance was made possible.
Through stories, features, reports and photographs we will tell the story of the impact of Ebola on women over the past year. Women who have demonstrated courage, resilience and the ability to survive the outbreak of one of the deadliest viruses on earth.
Click here for featured stories.
Nigerian Tope Ogun Wins AWDF Women In Film Award
Nigerian Tope Ogun Wins AWDF Women In Film Award
[tp lang=”en” not_in=”fr”]Nigerian Director/ Producer Tope Oshin Ogun has won the African Women’s Development Fund’s first African Women in Film Award.
Ogun, an acclaimed director with roots in both Film and Television was given the award at the Golden Movie Awards ceremony held on Saturday June 27 at the State House banquet hall in Accra.
The “AWDF African Women in Film Award,” honours an African woman whose work demonstrates measurable efforts to change the narrative and challenge stereotypes about African women. Tope was chosen for her outspoken voice against domestic abuse in Nigeria, an issue she brilliantly addressed in the 2014 short film New Horizons, a story about four women’s experiences with abuse.
“Being the recipient of AWDF’s first African Woman In Film Award is a true honour for me, and it’s a big surprise to learn that one is recognised and celebrated for being true to oneself and calling and passion and profession, ” Ogun told AWDF.
AWDF conferred the award at the ceremony which was organized by Golden Movie Awards (GMA), a new pan African award scheme that seeks to recognise outstanding work in the African movie industry. AWDF partnered with GMA for its maiden edition as part of its mandate to use arts as tool to promote social justice and to challenge negative stereotypes about women.
As the winner of the award, Ogun will be a lead facilitator in a one- day capacity building programme for African women in the film industry, organized by AWDF and GMA.
Ogun has an expansive portfolio that includes directing 350 episodes of the successful African soap opera “Tinsel”, an award winning feature length film “Journey To Self” and 3 multiple award winning shorts films namely “The Young Smoker”, “Till Death Do Us Part” and “New Horizons.”[/tp]
[tp lang=”fr” not_in=”en”]La réalisatrice/productrice nigériane Tope Oshin Ogun a remporté le Premier Prix de Cinéma des femmes africaines du Fonds Africain de développement de la femme.
Ogun, réalisatrice de renom impliquée à la fois dans le cinéma et la télévision a reçu le prix lors de la cérémonie des Golden Movie Awards tenue le samedi 27 Juin à la State House banquet hall à Accra.
Le “Prix de Cinéma des femmes africaines d’AWDF” honore une femme africaine dont le travail démontre les efforts tangibles pour changer le récit et lutter contre les stéréotypes sur les femmes africaines. Tope a été choisie pour sa voix franche contre la violence domestique au Nigeria, une question qu’elle a brillamment traitée en 2014 dans le court-métrage New Horizons, une histoire sur les expériences de quatre femmes victimes d’abus.
«Être lauréate du Prix de Cinéma des femmes africaines d’AWDF est un véritable honneur pour moi, et c’est une grande surprise d’apprendre que l’on est reconnue et célébrée pour être fidèle à soi-même, sa vocation, sa passion et à la profession,” déclare Ogun à AWDF.
AWDF a décerné ce prix lors de la cérémonie qui a été organisée par Golden Movie Awards (GMA), une académie panafricaine qui vise à reconnaître les travaux remarquable dans l’industrie du cinéma africain. AWDF a collaboré avec GMA pour sa première édition dans le cadre de sa mission, utiliser les arts comme outil pour promouvoir la justice sociale et de combattre les stéréotypes négatifs sur les femmes.
En tant que lauréate, Ogun sera le médiateur principal dans un programme de renforcement des capacités d’une journée pour les femmes africaines dans l’industrie du cinéma, organisé par AWDF et GMA.
Ogun dispose d’un portfolio large dont la direction de 350 épisodes du feuilleton africain “Tinsel”, un long métrage primé “Journey To Self” et plusieurs courts-métrage dont 3 primés à savoir «Le jeune fumeur”, “Till Death Do Us Partie “et” Nouveaux Horizons “.[/tp]
Sierra Leone’s Disabled Women & Girls Union Combats Stigma In Ebola Epidemic
Sierra Leone’s Disabled Women & Girls Union Combats Stigma In Ebola Epidemic
[tp lang=”en” not_in=”fr”]The outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus last year left in its wake not only over 10,000 dead in Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia, but the equally devastating impact of stigma.
Fear and superstition of the haemorrhagic disease has led to Ebola survivors being repeatedly outcast from their communities, shunned and abandoned by family and friends, causing untold emotional and psychological damage.
The Disabled Women and Girls in Sierra Leone’s Kailahun District has led the way in breaking down those barriers through an innovative project aimed at mitigating the spread of Ebola amongst disabled women and girls in Ebola infected Communities in Kailahun District in Sierra Leone.
The project’s activities centered around the sensitization of caregivers of disabled women and girls in the localities about Ebola. The group provided thirty radios and hygiene materials to heads of families with disabled women and girls. The special high-frequency radios were chosen to facilitate prompt dissemination of information on Ebola.
One outstanding example of the success of the project is the case of Isata Momoh, an Ebola survivor from the village of Borbohun. Shunned after her discharge from the Ebola treatment centre, she lived in isolation until the Disabled Women & Girls Union intervened. Through a skillful sensitisation program, the fears of the Isata’s community were allayed, eventually leading to Isata’s reintegration.
Before the involvement of Disabled Women & Girls Union, there had been an increase in the cases of death and infection from Ebola in the targeted communities. One contributing factor was that hundreds of discharged Ebola patients had sexual intercourse with their spouses and partners before the end of the recommended 90 days abstinence period, unaware of the risk of transfer. Consequently, their spouses and partners were infected, leading to new cases of Ebola.
In response, the Disabled Women & Girls Union project mounted intensive education in the affected areas. Seventy five out of total of 85 Ebola survivors who had had unprotected sex before the end of the suggested mandatory period were reexamined for signs of infection or reinfection, leading to a reduction in the spread of the virus.
One other result of the project was the introduction of new by-laws by chiefs and other community elders in the project communities to deter members from flouting the rules relating to the outlined issues. Penalties in the form of fines will be imposed on offenders.
In the future, Disabled Women & Girls Union plans to follow up on Ebola survivors to curb further hostility and stigmatization. They will also promote income-generating activities, and continue with psycho-social counseling to help them cope with the devastating effects of the disease.[/tp]
[tp lang=”fr” not_in=”en”]L’épidémie du virus Ebola de l’année dernière a laissé dans son sillage non seulement plus de 10.000 morts en Sierra Leone, en Guinée et au Libéria, mais aussi l’impact dévastateur de la stigmatisation.
La peur et la superstition de la maladie hémorragique a conduit à plusieurs reprises les survivants d’Ebola a être les parias de leurs communautés, boudés et abandonnés par famille et amis, causant des dommages émotionnels et psychologiques incalculables.
Les femmes et filles invalides à cause de la maladie dans le district de Kailahun en Sierra Leone ont ouvert la voie pour briser ces barrières grâce à un projet novateur visant à atténuer la propagation du virus Ebola chez les femmes et les filles handicapées dans les collectivités infectées dans le district de Kailahun en Sierra Leone.
Les activités du projet centrées autour de la sensibilisation des personnels soignants, femmes et filles, dans les localités touchées par Ebola. Le groupe a fourni trente radios et du matériel d’hygiène aux chefs de familles avec des femmes et des filles ayant des séquelles. Des radios spéciales à haute fréquence ont été choisies pour faciliter la diffusion rapide de l’information sur le virus Ebola.
Un exemple remarquable de la réussite du projet est le cas de Isata Momoh, une survivante d’Ebola du village de Borbohun. Boudée après sa sortie du centre de traitement Ebola, elle a vécu dans l’isolement jusqu’à ce que Disabled Women & Girls Union intervienne. Grâce à un programme de sensibilisation habile, les craintes de la communauté d’Isata ont été apaisées, pour aboutir finalement à sa réintégration.
Avant la participation de Disabled Women & Girls Union, il y avait eu une augmentation des cas de décès et d’infection par le virus Ebola dans les communautés ciblées. Un facteur aggravant était que des centaines de patients touchés par Ebola ont eu des rapports sexuels avec leurs conjoints et partenaires avant la fin de la période de 90 jours d’abstinence recommandée, ignorant le risque de transfert. Par conséquent, leurs conjoints et partenaires ont été infectés, conduisant à de nouveaux cas d’Ebola.
En réponse, Disabled Women & Girls Union a monté un projet d’éducation intensive dans les zones touchées. Soixante-quinze des 85 survivantes d’Ebola qui avaient eu des rapports sexuels non protégés avant la fin de la période d’abstinence recommandée ont été réexaminées pour des signes d’infection ou de réinfection, conduisant à une réduction de la propagation du virus.
A l’avenir, Disabled Women & Girls Union prévoit le suivi des survivantes d’Ebola pour mieux juguler l’hostilité et la stigmatisation dont elles sont victimes. Ils seront également présents pour promouvoir des activités génératrices de revenus, et continuer avec un soutien psychosocial pour les aider à faire face aux effets dévastateurs de la maladie.[/tp]