Experts want sex education for youngsters
The Acting Director of Youth Education through Sports Tanzania (YES
Tanzania), Kenneth Luvanda has advised governments in sub Saharan Africa
to provide adolescents and the youth with comprehensive sexual and
reproductive health (SRH) services and outreach.
He attributed lack of the services to the increased number of
unwanted pregnancies among adolescents not only in the region, but in
Sub-Saharan Africa as a whole.
“We need civil societies and international organizations to ensure
adolescents and young people access to SRHR right information,
commodities and services,” he said.
YES Tanzania’s survey has revealed that sustainability of the
campaign is possible only when the target groups take ownership and
control over Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights (SRHR).
He said through continuous support, coordination and conducting
regular needs assessments, his organisation would tailor its support and
training of the target groups.
He said his organization was committed to realization of
sustainable development through enticing the target groups into
acknowledgment of their rights towards job creation, environmental
protection, peace and security, justice and freedom.
YES Tanzania is a youth oriented nongovernmental organization
focused on the provision of comprehensive sexual and reproductive health
services which include contraceptives, safe abortion and post-abortion
care counseling and treatment for all young people.
It also seeks to impart young people with skills as an instrument
to participate in decision making, take responsible and formal roles in
the society through nurturing their confidence and experience.
“Young people have much to offer given the opportunity to get involved in governance,” Luvanda said.
The Asian-Pacific Resource and Research Centre for Women (ARROW)
says SRHR plays a major role in the lives of young people by enabling
them to decide freely and responsibly of all aspects of their sexuality.
It says SRHR is also important to socio-economic development of
communities, societies and nations at large. It is estimated that
adolescents and young people in sub-Saharan Africa constitute 19.6 per
cent of the population.
Addressing young people’s SRHR in Africa is also vital, given the
devastating impact of HIV and AIDS, the high rates of unintended
pregnancies that may lead to unsafe abortions, given restrictive laws
and inaccessibility of safe services.
However, SRHR still remains non-priority issue on the development
agenda of many sub-Saharan Africa countries due to limited political
leadership and commitment to realization of SRHR and inadequate resource
allocation.
The language of rights in SRH is still controversial in African
countries which continue to undermine SRHR policy and programmes.
Experts want sex education for youngsters
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