Girl Child Network Zimbabwe intensifies work to empower girls –Know us better
Betty Makoni who has been named by Newsweek as one of the women to shake the world founded the organisation and took it to greater heights. Today the organisation has achieved so much in terms of mobilising communities, families, school and traditional leadership in empowering girls.
Girl Child Network Zimbabwe scored a
first when it became the first organisation world over to win the prestigious United Nations Red Ribbon award world over at
International HIV and AIDS conference in Toronto in 2006. The organisation
continues to score a first in front line voluntary service to girls. Through its
empowerment programs girls are being empowered to start self help projects and
reach highest levels of leadership. The work of the organisation has needs to
be fully supported so that it continues to benefit other girls in other
countries.
Girl Child Network Zimbabwe work to be
scaled up worldwide: Best Practice Model for empowering girls
Background
The idea to come up with an organisation that champions the rights of the
girl child in Zimbabwe was perceived in 1998 by Betty Makoni, the current
director of GCN and her ten upper six students. She was deeply influenced by her
experiences of abuse as a child and the many incidents of gender based violence
in the community where she grew up.
After listening to the often horrifying stories of girls, the founder
members felt that something had to be done and in November 1998, they formed an
informal discussion group, which became a safe space for girls to meet and talk
freely about their problems and devise possible solutions. The club at Zengeza
1 High became the first girls’ empowerment club in Zimbabwe. As the word spread
about the club, neighbouring schools subsequently adopted the idea and began
forming their own clubs for girls, all with the objective of helping provide a
safe forum where girls could meet, discuss challenges, offer each other support
and devise solutions to their problems
On March 1999 the organisation was formally established with a specific
mandate to a voice for the voiceless school aged girls between the ages of
0-18. It set out not only to advocate on their behalf, but also to empower the
girls to speak out for themselves when their rights were being threatened. The
beginning of its formal existence in 1999 marked the beginning of great things
to come as the forgotten girl child found a channel to highlight her plight,
interests, voice out sensitive aspirations and hopes in an effective manner.
OUR MISSION
GCN’s mission is to resocialise girls
(0 -18 years old) so that they articulate their individual rights and
strategically position themselves to take charge of their own empowerment.
OUR VISION
We envision a society where girls are
empowered and enjoy their rights with support from whole communities so as to
walk in the fullness of their potential in line with the Millennium Development
Goals.
GCN’s GOAL
To protect and promote the rights
of the girl child and to support the economic, political, social and cultural
empowerment of the girl child in order for her to assert those rights in the
home, school and community.
OUR MANDATE
GCN’s mandate comes from
the girls of Zimbabwe themselves, who in joining girls’ empowerment clubs have
signalled their desire for GCN to lead the holistic empowerment of the girl
child and to act as a voice for vulnerable girl children through leadership
training, confidence building, advocacy to legal access and for child friendly
laws and policies, community education on child abuse and the urgent need for eradication of harmful
cultural practices that hinder the full physical, spiritual and emotional
growth of the girl child.
GCN’S OBJECTIVES
·
To support individual transformation of girls through capacity building
training in gender, HIV/AIDS, human rights, leadership and confidence building.
·
To ensure laws and policies that promote reproductive, economic, social
and political rights of girls are in place and fully implemented so as to
minimise gender based violence.
·
To register media attitude change and gender sensitive reporting on the
girl child.
·
To support girl child survivors of gender based violence and girls at
risk through emergency rescue operations, provisions of emergency safe shelter
and referral to legal and medical aid and counselling services in partnership
with other stakeholders so that the girl child realises her full
potential.
·
To support and promote girls’ access to education through the provision
of school fees, sanitary ware,
panties, exercise books and other
basic needs to the orphaned and vulnerable girls.
GCN VALUES AND CULTURE
We are committed to the
following values
ü Innovation
ü Integrity
ü Excellence
ü Passion,
ü Transparency
ü Professionalism
ü Empathy
GCN’s CORE PROGRAMMES
GCN has five main programmes all aimed at facilitating, instilling
and providing the means of addressing issues which impede the full growth and
development of the girl child in all spheres of life. The programmes aim to create
a culture of prevention and these are strategic units well coordinated and
focused on girl child and community development and empowerment.
GIRLS EMPOWERMENT CLUBS
- Setting up and management of girls
clubs in schools so as to create platforms where girls meet and go through
the above stages of empowerment
- Promote information, knowledge and skills
sharing on career guidance,
scholarships, referral to service providers within girls’ clubs
- Educate girls on their legal rights,
reproductive health issues, HIV/AIDS, peer to peer counseling, leadership
and how to start and run girls clubs etc.
- Develop girls’ social, problem-solving through
peer to peer counseling, leadership, self-defense skills, with the aim of
helping groom confident, assertive young women.
- Skills
training (life skills)
- Implement mentorship programs (Women As Role
Models program)
- Club launches are monthly celebrations that
officially recognize girls who would have excelled in the empowerment
programmes
ADVOCACY AND LOBBY
- This program saves as a “mouthpiece of the girl
child” in lobbying policy – and law makers to formulate, amend and
implement policies and laws that protect the girl child, including those
that address gender equality and equity, HIV/AIDS, orphan care, sexual
offenses, Child/Victim Friendly Court structures, and harmful traditional
practices. Advocacy also targets
harmonizing Zimbabwean laws with regional and international legal statutes
like the Convention on the Rights of the Child and AU Protocol on Women’s
Rights (To which Zimbabwe is a signatory member)
- GCN conducts extensive community based
sensitization about existing laws and policies that protect the rights of
women and children and engages in a significant amount of media, radio and
television debate and publicity.
- At a strategic level, the Girl Child Network
seeks to engage stakeholders , including communities, schools, government,
and policy makers in advocacy and lobbying for eradication of practices
which impede the girl child’s’ full
physical, emotional, spiritual growth and development.
- Policy change is critical to ensure that court
cases of child sexual abuse are handled within the shortest time
possible. (In Zimbabwe, sexual
abuse cases can take up to two years
to be heard in the courts, during which time the abusers may still
be living in the communities with ample access to their accusers, often
resulting in intimidation.
- Popularization of laws, policies, regional and
international legal instruments that promote and protect girls’ rights in
the home, school and communities
- Lobby for the enactment of the proposed Child
Sexual Offence Bill and review of the Marriages Act and other laws that
undermine the rights of the girl child
- Advocate for effective implementation of laws
and policies that protect girls
- Train traditional leadership on laws and policies that protect the rights of the
girl child
- Lobby
government for a functional children’s court and effective Victim Friendly
Courts with Victim Friendly people and equipment
- Advocate for
girl child friendly language and programmes through the media, radio and
television
- The
programme belongs to various child welfare and Gender Based Violence
Taskforces nationally, regionally and internationally which are watchdogs
of children’s rights. GCN has built strong coalitions with local, regional
and international coalitions to ensure protection of children’s rights and
help to build a strong voice
.
INFORMATION DOCUMENTATION AND DISSEMINATION
- Monitoring and responding to media coverage of
gender, child abuse, HIV and AIDS, etc.
- Producing information materials to be
disseminated to the public
- GCN joins other stakeholders in celebrating
commemorative days like the Day of the African Child, International
Women’s Day, World AIDS Day and World Day for the Prevention of Child
Abuse. GCN uses such events to
remind government to “walk the talk” since Zimbabwe is a signatory to many
regional and international conventions whose principles are not being
enacted
- Sensitizing the public and media practitioners
to issues of child abuse and to the activities of GCN.
- Raise the visibility of GCN in all its core
activities through timely media responses, research and media
- Reach out to all the publics of GCN through the
production of the newsflash, in – house publications and documentaries on
issues such as abuse, gender, HIV and AIDS girls rights and empowerment
- Organise image building strategies such as
media awards, workshops for journalists and engage in corporate social
responsibility activities
- Document program reports, organisational
reports and any other relevant promotional material meant to promote and
enhance the image of the organisation
- Document all empowerment activities carried
out by GCN in all areas of operation and produce regular news bulletins
for girls and other stakeholders from all areas of operation
- Collate data and statistics relating to
Gender Based Violence and carry out desk studies from time to time so as
to evaluate impact of GCN programmes in areas of operation
- Carry out media awareness and sensitization
campaigns through dissemination of accurate information on issues
affecting the girl child
- Ensure positive portrayal of girls through
the media by tracking news articles, adverts, music, films and
documentaries
- Girls’ active participation in documentation
and dissemination of information is key and there is a strictly Girls’
team in the information programme that produces news bulletins and fully
engaged in creative writing and editing
GIRLS
AT RISK SUPPORT PROGRAM
This is the driving force of the organization’s humanitarian assistance
to the target beneficiaries-the girls. This includes providing subsistence,
food, school fees, sanitary wear and other related needs of girls from
economically disadvantaged families. To date the programme has paid school fees
for more than 15, 000 girls in primary and secondary schools. The programme has
also managed to assist 4 000 beneficiaries through paying for medical expenses,
transport expenses, food allowances and other educational related needs of the
girls. No much empowerment can be achieved without providing the basic needs to
girls, in the form of food, shelter and clothing and hence this program
attaches more meaning to what we mean by empowerment..Since establishment over
70 000 rape survivors have passed through girls empowerment project.
COMMUNITY
DEVELOPMENT AND EMPOWERMENT
·
Implement Self-Help Grant Schemes strategy as exit and wean off package for old girls clubs and community
based organisations
·
Community capacity building through school based parents committees on
girls’ rights, gender , community group counseling and HIV and AIDS
·
Community based sensitization programmes on trafficking in girls and
other harmful cultural practices
·
Men’s and boys’ Gender Based Violence programme to enable men and boys to
be supportive of girls’ empowerment and development and help men and boys to
support a gender violence free society
·
Implement HIV and AIDS and National Orphan Care Policies
·
Lend
assistance in emergencies
·
Community Group Counseling training imparts basic skills in counseling
to communities to enable them to handle and manage child abuse through Girl
Child Monitoring Committees
·
Gender and HIV and AIDS
training
.CONTACT DETAILS
Please note Girl Child Network invested so much in
girls property and all offices below are wholly owned by the charity
The Girl Child Network
Head Office
Zengeza Girls Empowerment
Centre
Stand No 16352
Zengeza 4
Chitungwiza
Telephones:(070) 31332 –Admin
(070)
31221 -Progs
Cell: 077 288 255
Contact Person: Kumbirayi Kahiya Chikowero
Email:
Website: www.gcn.org.zw
Branches
Hwange (Matabeleland South)
592 Empumalanga
Hwange
Cellphone : 077 288
254
Telephone
Contact person: Robina Chimowa
Rusape
Chitsotso Girls Empowerment Village
P.O Box 253
Rusape
Chihota
Near Manyaira Primary school
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