The Embassy of Netherlands in Kampala and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Wednesday signed a partnership agreement for a four-year (2019 – 2023) programme to Advance Sexual & Reproductive Health and Rights (SRHR) in West Nile and Acholi sub- regions in Uganda.
Funded by the Embassy of the Netherlands in Kampala, the 24 million Euro programme will support interventions to address five major SRHR issues among them the high maternal mortality, the high unmet need for family planning and the high rates of teenage pregnancy and child marriages.
It will also look to tackle the high occurrence of Gender-Based Violence (GBV), as well as inequalities in access to sexual and reproductive health services for vulnerable groups such as adolescents, refugees, and persons with disabilities.
UNFPA will implement this programme in close collaboration with its strategic government partners such as the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Education and Sports, the Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development, the National Population Council, as well as through district local government and non-governmental/ community based organisation.
Uganda performs poorly against key sexual reproductive health and rights indicators.
According to the 2016 Uganda Demographic and Health Survey, teenage pregnancy has stagnated at 25 percent for the last decade, contributing to 26 percent of maternal deaths.
“Such poor indicators jeopardize Uganda’s opportunity to harness the Demographic Dividend and to achieve its vision of becoming an upper middle income country by 2040,” said Mr. Alain Sibenaler, UNFPA Representative.
“Delivering an integrated package of services and rights to ensure zero unmet need for family planning, zero maternal deaths and zero tolerance of GBV and harmful practices is the core of our work, operationalizing UNFPA’s mandate to carry out the ICPD Programme of Action, as a means to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals,” he added.
The Ambassador of the Netherlands to Uganda, Henk Jan Bakker, said that Sexual & Reproductive Health and Rights is one of the pillars of Dutch development cooperation.
He said that “through this programme the Dutch government seeks to further contribute to the government of Uganda’s efforts to decrease maternal mortality, address unmet need for family planning, reduce gender based violence and promote gender equality, reduce teenage pregnancies and early marriages. And ultimately contribute to the country’s opportunity to harness the demographic dividend”.
The programme targets to reach approximately 2.8 million people with SRHR information and services, specifically targeting adolescents and young people, women of reproductive age (15-49 years), and men including refugees, GBV survivors, and persons with disability.
The Director General of Uganda’s National Population Council, Dr. Jotham Musinguzi, said the four-year funding will contribute to the implementation of the Roadmap to Harness the Demographic Dividend in Uganda; support the Strategies in the Uganda National Development Plan (NDP) III Vision 2040; and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
He added that ultimately, the programme will strengthen the national and institutional mechanisms that integrate population dynamics into Uganda’s larger development agenda.
CN/as/APA