Southern African Youth (SAY) Initiative - Southern African
SAY projects have been launched in eight southern African countries.These are:
- Angola: Improving the quality of reproductive health servicesfor high-risk, war-affected adolescent girls and other vulnerable youth in Angola
- Botswana: Programme towards improved reproductivehealth and the promotion of safer sex among young peoplein urban areas
- Lesotho: National partnership support to combat thetransmission of HIV and AIDS among adolescent girls
- Malawi: Meeting the development and participationrights of adolescent girls
- Mozambique: Joint UN support to the provincial HIVand AIDS Operational Plan of Zambézia Province
- South Africa: Preventing the spread of HIV and AIDSand mitigating its impact in the Limpopo Province
- Swaziland: Joint UN support to develop regional capacityto combat HIV and AIDS among adolescents
- Zimbabwe (1): District initiatives on HIV and AIDS
- Zimbabwe (2): Youth programme on adolescent reproductive health and HIV and AIDS
- Subregional technical support project: Telling theStory
Young people are particularly vulnerable to HIV infection and often carry the burden of caring for sick family members. Their vulnerability is exacerbated by ignorance and misconception. Marginalised young people (including street children, refugees and migrants) are at particular risk.The course of the epidemic will depend on efforts put in place to protect youth from sexual exploitation and the prevention of STIs (including HIV), particularly among vulnerable groups.
HIV/AIDS
SAY comprises nine independent projects located in eight of southern Africa's most severely affected countries, as well as a sub-regional technical support project (Telling the Story). Through the work of UN country teams, SAY aims to catalyse innovative and expanded national responses to the HIV/AIDS epidemic to meet the needs of the youth in southern Africa, especially girls, who are most vulnerable to HIV infection.The main objectives of the SAY projects are:
- to help prevent the spread of HIV and, particularly, to address the vulnerability of girls to infection
- to improve reproductive health services for youth
Partners
Unf/Unaids
Source: UNODC PDF file on April 5, 2004
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