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Zimbabwe
is a founder member and joined the
Alliance in 1994.
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Zimbabwe
hosted the first PPD Board Meeting
in 1995 to draft the By-Laws ,and
the PPD Programme of Work and decisions
on the host and to select the site
of the Partners Secretariat. Zimbabwe
continues to forge strong linkages
in the region and has arranged a number
of strategic meetings over the last
10 years.
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The
Zimbabwe National Family Planning
Council (ZNFPC) is the focal point
for coordinating South-South activities.
The ZNFPC, along with the Population
Secretariat (POPSEC) in Uganda, and
the National Council for Population
and Development (NCPD) in Kenya, provides
strong support to the GLP efforts
and assurance of assistance to the
programme in respective country settings
and the regional context. The council
with support from UNFPA and JHPIEGO
instigated an orientation course on
RH service delivery guidelines for
programme managers.
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Zimbabwe
reflects a remarkable commitment to
HIV/AIDS policy interventions, being
the first country in the world with
an AIDS levy of 3% over the income
tax. A team of parliamentarians visited
Uganda to observe its successful AIDS
programme to be replicated in Zimbabwe
and will involve the government civil
service in its implementation.
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Among
other health concerns, the Ministry
of Health and Child Welfare, through
the ZNFPC and in collaboration with
other stakeholders, piloted 2 reproductive
health initiatives targeted at youths
of 10-24 years in 7 sites with funding
support from UNFPA, USAID, the Rockefeller
Foundation and the Government of Zimbabwe.
It has also launched the Promotion
of Youth Responsibility Project and
a project on developing effective
RH Service Delivery Models for the
youth in Zimbabwe. Initiatives also
include the multi-national and multi-media
“Africa Alive” youth programme
created with assistance from the JHU/PCS
attended by African countries from
the Sub-Saharan region. To improve
their own efforts, ZNFPC/University
of Zimbabwe and MOH&CW visited
Kenya in 1998 to observe and share
experiences on youth programmes.
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Zimbabwe
had organised an orientation session
for consultants and NGOs which included:
ZAPSO, Women’s Action Group,
Musasa Project, Forum for African
Women Educationists (FAWE), WILDAF,
UNFPA, Care International Uganda,
FPA Uganda, ZNFPC. The seminar objective
was to introduce the newly developed
the Partners Handbook to consultants
and NGO representatives and to obtain
feedback on the handbook. The country
also facilitated the meeting of a
multi sector committee comprising
consultants and technical experts
to develop concepts from various reproductive
health topics extracted from the National
Reproductive Health Plan (1998-2002).
These have been packaged into proposals
to be presented at the regional workshop
for possible funding from donors.
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Zimbabwe
is a key player in the promotion of
South-South collaboration. It has
been instrumental in setting an NGO-GO
network with the NGO Group Meeting
on strategies for South-South Initiative
held on 10 February 2000. The network
focus corresponds with the priority
area of the Alliance, namely RH and
FP, ASRH, maternal mortality and morbidity,
STI and HIV/AIDS. The meeting also
discussed the need to include gender
and development component that is
cross cutting all four areas.
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In
pursuit of international cooperation,
the country has successfully shared
and exchanged effective schemes with
other countries. From 1995, with support
from JHPIEGO, the University of Zimbabwe,
the Ministry of Health and Child Welfare
and the ZNFPC piloted the screening
of cervical cancer using visual inspection
and acetic acid technique in 3 districts
which was later replicated in other
countries and was disseminated at
the 6th Partners Board meeting in
Beijing and an Asian Regional Conference
of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists
in Bangkok in 2000. There have been
two study tours for Malawi and Botswana
and Swaziland to attend medical training
in IUD/Norplant insertion and removal
skills. Then a group of private midwives,
funded through SEATS, visited their
Ugandan counterparts in 1998 to understudy
private midwives programmes. Exchange
of ideas regarding HIV/AIDS prevention
and youth programmes has also taken
place at a regional level.
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Zimbabwe
joined Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Botswana,
Malawi and Zambia in The Girl Child
Friendly Education Initiative which
emanated from the Partners in collaboration
with Danida. The priority area is
gender and development, bringing gender
issues into the main stream of the
programmes with particular emphasis
on the girl child as primary stakeholder.
It has launched a further two initiatives
– the Girl Child Network and
Childline – to fight sexual
abuse and to sensitise the public
to the psychological and psycho-social
effects of child sexual abuse which
is on the rise in Zimbabwe. These
efforts empower children to voice
their perspective.
In addition, Zimbabwe has hosted high
profile South-South regional meetings,
such as :
-
Board and Executive Committee
meetings of PPD
- Sub
Saharan Africa Regional Workshop
as well as the PPD sponsored Proposal
Writing Skills Workshop from 31
May-4 June 1999. An inventory
of skills and experience covering
the areas programme experience,
country experience, programme
development, donor relations,
collaboration experience, was
carried out on participants attending
the workshop
- One-day
roundtable meeting in 1999 with
donors: USAID, UNFPA, EU, DFID,
World Bank, UNAIDS, WHO UNICEF,
UNDP, Embassies of the U.S.A.
, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Switzerland,
UK, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Egypt,
South Africa, Kenya, Indonesia,
and Japan, CIDA, University of
Zimbabwe, Euro Health Zimbabwe,
National AIDS Coordination Programme,
Zimbabwe AIDS Prevention and Support
Organisation (ZAPSO), USAID and
collaborating agency JHPIEGHO.
The purpose of the meeting was
to establish linkages and reinforce
existing ones with the donors
to enhance partner countries’
capacity to implement their Population
and Development programmes through
South-South modalities; to promote
negotiations between donors and
the local programme representatives;
enabling the programme staff to
have direct input from the donors
and expose local staff to the
needs, requirements and sensitivities
of the donors.
- Inter
regional workshop on reduction
of maternal mortality and morbidity
in1998.
- Pan
African Environmental and Mutagen
Studies (PAEMS) Conference hosted
by the University of Zimbabwe
in March 1999 to share research
studies and findings on the effect
and magnitude of malignant diseases
affecting humans and animals.
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