mardi 8 décembre 2015

WORLD AIDS DAY CELEBRATION 2015

WORLD AIDS DAY CELEBRATION Report of Commemorative Activities by Deserve November 30th to December 1st, 2015 In line with i... thumbnail 1 summary
WORLD AIDS DAY CELEBRATION
Report of Commemorative Activities by Deserve
November 30th to December 1st, 2015

In line with its strategy to promote health awareness and educationto the public, Deserve Cameroon undertook some awareness campaigns to mark the 2015 World AIDS Day Celebration in Bamenda. A team of two took part in radio sensitization on CRTV Bamenda on November 30th, 2015 from 5 am to 6:30 am. The team was led by the Founding President of Deserve, Desmond Nji A. who doubled as the National Frist Vice President of the Cameroon Network and the Secretary of Deserve, TanekeuGoula Durance.

The President dwelt a length on the transmission of HIV in which he mentioned that 95% of transmission is through sexual intercourse. He also highlighted, while quoting UNICEF statistics that girls are more vulnerable than boys. While explaining the reasons why girls are more vulnerable to the pandemic than boys, Desmond Nji decried the phenomenon in some university campuses whereby girls are forced into sex by some lecturers against their wish before they can obtain a pass. This was highlighted as a violation of the sexual rights of girls.

Tankeu Durance discussed on the grassroots efforts of the Cameroon Youth Network in sensitization and education. She advised that abstinence is best for unmarried youth as a means of prevention.

Immediately after this media awareness, Desmond Nji spoke to over 500 students at the Government Bilingual High School (GBHS) Bamenda about HIV/AIDS. He centred hishis discoursein his alma mater on the theme of the World AIDS Day 2015, ‘Zero New Infections, Zero Discrimination and Zero Deaths Related to HIV.’ He called on the youth to do their HIV tests as an essential way of reducing the spread of the virus. He also answered questions from some youth concerning mother-to-child transmission and HIV screening.

   

Media Awareness
Desmond Nji AndTanekeu Durance on radio in CRTV Bamenda 




 

dimanche 29 novembre 2015

Desmond Nji Atanga, Women Deliver Young Leader

My Selection as a ‘Women Deliver Young Leader,’ April 2015 Experiences and Benefits The Women Deliver Programme is a three-year f... thumbnail 1 summary




My Selection as a ‘Women Deliver Young Leader,’ April 2015
Experiences and Benefits
The Women Deliver Programme is a three-year fellowship programme made up of a cohort of youth under the age of thirty across the world who prioritize the health and wellbeing of girls and women in their civic leadership engagements. Under the auspices of Women Deliver, the programme works to reinforce the capacity of its young subscribers to become more powerful forces to reckon with in the promotion of the sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) of women, girls and youth. Women Deliver believes that, ‘When the world invests in girls and women, everybody wins.’
The benefits of a Young Leader consist of but are not limited to the following:
-          Visibility as a Young Leader and champion for sexual and reproductive health and rights of girls and women;
-          Full scholarship to attend the Women Deliver 2016 Conference in Copenhagen;
-          Opportunities to engage in storytelling activities, producing photos, videos, and other media content that highlights the work that Young Leaders are engaged in at the community level;
-          Opportunities to share work, projects and ideas with experts and other young people in the field through blogs, media interviews, etc.;
-          Networking opportunities with high-level decision-makers, stakeholders, media, private sector representatives, and others;
-          Several information-sharing and capacity-building opportunities on-site at and in the lead-up tothe Women Deliver Conference in Copenhagen;
-          Engagement with a robust network of other youth advocates and activists working for SRHRaround the world. 
In March 2015, I applied to be a fellow of the Women Deliver Young Leaders Programme. I was motivated by my longstanding track record as a young activist in the promotion of the sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) of youth and girls. It was my fervent prayer to find an international platform where I could join my voice to that of others to intensify strategies to make a world a better place for all to live in; especially those whose contributions to societal growth are mostly underrated. Girls, women and youth have profound prowess to make valuable changes in the world’s character if the world invests in them. Their wellbeing largely affects the wellbeing of the entire society. I found out that the Women Deliver Young Leaders Programme was just the right place for me!



Brimming with panache, I applied for the programme. In April 2015, I was selected from a large pool of applications around the globeto be a Young Leader of the Women Deliver Young Leaders Programme. Thanks be to God—He granted my heart’s desire! It was indeed, a great cause for me to be beatific.I became a member of a cohort of 200 world young leaders working across the globe to largely foster the wellbeing of girls, and youth.
As a Women Deliver Young Leader, I have built on my experiences in the programme to strengthen the ‘Help a Girl Save the Society’ project which I initiated in early 2015. It offers comprehensive sexuality education training to thirty in-school and out-of-school youth in Bamenda.
In addition, the Women Deliver Young Leaders Programme added impetus to my initiative to found a charity which propagates the health and welfare of women, girls and youth. This dream finally came true in on 16 August 2015 when Deserve was founded.
Besides, my Women Deliver Profile helped to strengthen my video application to become a youth moderator and speaker in the 2015 International Conference on Family Planning (ICFP 2015) which was to take place in November 2015. I was selected and distinctively given the role of moderator and speaker. ICFP 2015 was postponed to January 2016 and is now known as ICFP 2016.
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Brief Concept Note for Comprehensive Sexuality Education in Cameroon: "Help a Girl, save the Society"

Deserve   Cameroon Watchword: Let all your things be done with charity     Brief Concept Note for Comprehensive Sexuality E... thumbnail 1 summary


Deserve  
Cameroon
Watchword: Let all your things be done with charity
  

Brief Concept Note for Comprehensive Sexuality Education in Cameroon (April, 2015)

‘Help a Girl, Save the Society’
A comprehensive Sexuality Education Initiative



What it is All About?

The role of peer educators in the sensitization and education of other youth on comprehensive sexuality education (CSE), which targets best practices as concerns girls’ and youths’ sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR), good leadership, communication for development and the fight against HIV/AIDS and other STI’s cannot be overemphasized. Within the gamut of its youth-oriented activities, Deserve carries out peer education formation in schools around Bamenda. This year, she intends to intensify the project with an added pedagogic touch in the training activities. It is on this basis that a scheme of work has been set with modules that need to be exhausted in 52 weeks at the end of which successful peer educators are certified as competent peer educators. It encapsulates the seven key CSE aspects as developed in the ‘It’s all in One Curriculum.’ The aspects are:

  1. Evidence-based
  2. Comprehensive
  3. Based on core values and human rights
  4. Gender-sensitive
  5. Promotes academic growth and critical thinking
  6. Fosters civic engagement
  7. Culturally appropriate.

It is a means of implementing paragraph 107 (e) of the 1995 Beijing Platform for Action which called on stakeholders to ‘Prepare and disseminate accessible information, through public health campaigns, the media, reliable counseling and the education system, designed to ensure that women and men, particularly young people, can acquire knowledge about their health, especially information on sexuality and reproduction.’

It is also in line with Meaningful Youth Participation, an aspect championed by the International Conference on Population and Development Programme of Action (ICPD), paragraph 6.15 which stipulates thus: ‘Youth should be actively involved in the planning, implementation and evaluation of development activities that have a direct impact on their daily lives. This is especially important with respect to information, education and communication activities and services concerning reproductive and sexual health, including the prevention of early pregnancies, sex education and the prevention of HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmissible diseases.’

Caption: Help a Girl, Save the Society

Theme: Comprehensive Sexual Education is Beneficial for Girls and Youth as part of strategies to attain the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG’s)









Contacts

Project Head:    Mr. Desmond Nji A.
Founder and Executive Director of Deserve
Women Deliver Young Leader, Cameroon

Tel:   (+237)679-834-976
          (+237)699-529-453

                                                            datanga@wdyoungleaders.org