Source: The Guardian
Supermodel Waris Dirie was just five when she became a victim of female genital mutilation. As she collects an award for her campaign against the practice, she explains why it has to stop.

Source: allAfrica
PEOPLE in various parts of the country have misinterpreted culture and traditional values, which has led to a high incidence of genderbased violence, especially against women.

Source: Channels Television
The Country Director of the United Nations Women, Dr Grace Ongile has challenged the Nigerian government to ensure gender mainstreaming at all levels.

Source: International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics
UN Women has reported on the progress it has made in mobilising representatives of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church to speak out against gender-based violence in the country, including female genital mutilation (FGM).

Source: Times of Zambia
Most teenage girls do not plan to get pregnant, but many do find themselves in this situation because of, among other things, peer pressure and influence from foreign cultures.

Source: Times of Zambia
Government, through its Reproductive Health Policy, has advised that reproduction health needs should be addressed in an integrated manner rather than in parallel compartments because reproductive ill-health results from complications.

Source: IPS
Gender equality around the world has increased dramatically over the past half-century even though the vast majority of countries continue to restrict women’s economic development in at least one way, the World Bank reports this week.

Source: IPS
Helen Baleke took up boxing at 16, after she was attacked by a man in Kampala’s Katanga slum. But the beating turned her into what she is today – one of only several female Ugandan amateur boxers.

Source: The Africa Report
The grim realities cannot be ignored as Africa celebrates its achievements in the area of human rights and empowerment of women, argues Joaquim Alberto Chissano, former president of Mozambique.

Source: Thomson Reuters Fundation
Women’s rights groups  in Tanzania are demanding that a new constitution clearly define the word ‘person’  to mean a man and a woman in a bid to promote gender equality.

Source: New York Daily News
Sudan’s public order law lets police officers publicly whip women who are accused of public indecency. The woman in this YouTube video was reportedly riding in a car with a man who wasn’t her husband or an immediate family member.

Source: Tanzania Daily News (Dar es Salaam)
Government statistics say it all. According to the Ministry of Education and Vocational Training, during the period of five-years, between 2004 and 2008, a total of 28,590 schoolgirls in the country dropped out of school as a result of unwanted pregnancy, 11,599 being secondary school students and 16,991 primary schools.

Source: Tanzania Daily News (Dar es Salaam)
Sumbawanga — DESPITE reports that the number of expectant mothers attending clinics has increased, few are said to give birth in health facilities and instead prefer using traditional midwives.

Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Africa
Civil society organizations in Africa commended governments on the continent for the progress made in improving socio-economic conditions of Africans, but urged them to do more to enhance women’s rights.

Source: United States Department of States
The United States is providing $10 million in funding for efforts to prevent and respond to gender-based violence in humanitarian emergencies worldwide.

Source: The New Ties
Women in Rwanda are at the centre of the country's development agenda, thanks to recent law reforms, MP-elect Esperance Mwiza, has said.

Source: UN News Centre
Women play a vital role as countries recover from conflict and seek to build lasting peace, top United Nations official said today, stressing the need to ensure their full participation in the economic and political lives of their nations.

Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation 
Last week I joined other leaders at the United Nations to review progress toward achieving the Millennium Development Goals, and discuss the future of global health and development. As I prepared for that meeting, I was haunted by the memory of a letter I received years ago.

Source: Time of Swaziland
The failure of the electorate to vote women into positions of authority has occasioned much national soul-searching and even the Lutsango leader, Aylline Dlamini, has noted that our traditional modes of living bear much of the blame.

Source: Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars (Washington, DC)
Washington, DC — We know a great deal about what it takes to prevent most pregnancy-related deaths and complications. This collective knowledge, coupled with political commitment and action, has led to a global reduction in maternal mortality of 47 percent since 1990 (WHO, 2012).

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