All East and Southern Africa region news

Prioritising Youth Voices During the Year of Action for Nutrition for Growth

2021: A year overflowing with opportunities   It’s 2021, and although very little may have changed so far in comparison to 2020 (come on, vaccines!), there has already been a huge shift: it is now officially the Year of Action for Nutrition.   Last year, the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in devastating losses to the decades of progress on […]

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COVID-19 impacting the health and wellbeing of children and families in Zimbabwe

The outbreak of COVID-19 in Zimbabwe is having drastic consequences to the health and wellbeing of children and their families in both urban and rural communities. Infants, children, pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers are facing significant risks to their nutritional status and well-being especially in contexts where access to essential health and nutrition services and […]

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The COVID-19 Menace and its impact on nutrition.

 BY JANE NAPAIS (YOUTH ADVOCATE FOR NUTRITION IN KENYA) It’s unfortunate how situations can change in a blink of an eye. Covid-19 has significantly affected service delivery globally, especially in the field of nutrition. Based on the Global Report on Food Crises 2020, it is projected that the pandemic may add as many as 132 […]

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Lessons from civil society resilience as we face COVID-19

“Adapt, Improvise, Overcome – the human spirit will always survive” These are the words of advice a colleague who worked in Ebola affected areas sent to me at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. I expected something much more technical and practical. He is right of course. At a certain point, it’s the spirit and […]

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Youth Leaders for Nutrition: Getting to know Maxwell and Florence

A couple of weeks ago two of our Youth Leaders for Nutrition, Florence Sibomana and Maxwell Mumba, from Rwanda and Zambia respectively, got their first taste of London. As well as developing a newfound love of Caribbean food, the two Youth Leaders for Nutrition certainly made their mark on the capital. They had audiences with […]

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13 reasons to be cheerful in 2019

In the UK, 2018 all went a bit Pete Tong. The government said “Thank u, next” to a whole host of Cabinet members. Some of us panicked about the lack of C with our KF. And after hopes were raised, English football fans found it wasn’t coming home after all. Then when I came back […]

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They came, they saw, they conquered: Global Youth Leaders for Nutrition

TUESDAY 6 NOVEMBER 2018 The Global Youth Leaders for Nutrition programme, round 2, took place in Rome last week. Four young people boarded their first-ever international flights and headed for the ‘Leave No One Behind – Making the Case for Adolescent Girls’ conference. The event, hosted by the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the Canadian […]

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World Food Day: why young people are leading the way to #zerohunger

Today, World Food Day, we’re celebrating the crucial role young people are playing in tackling malnutrition. This blog post is by Florence Sibomana, a medical student from Rwanda and member of the Youth Leaders for Nutrition programme 2018. She has a passion for global health and social justice. In July Florence was selected to attend an advocacy […]

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Today, World Food Day, we’re celebrating the crucial role young people are playing in tackling malnutrition.

This blog post is by Florence Sibomana, a medical student from Rwanda and member of the Youth Leaders for Nutrition programme 2018. She has a passion for global health and social justice.

In July Florence was selected to attend an advocacy training in Washington DC organised in partnership with ACTION, SUN Civil Society Network (SUN CSN), Results UK and Global Citizen. Following the training, Florence travelled to New York for the UN General Assembly to ensure that youth perspectives were included in key high-level discussions on nutrition.

Here’s one of the speeches she gave at the UN – a powerful example of why #youthpower is critical to ending hunger and malnutrition for all.

I am Florence Sibomana from Rwanda, a young female medical student and youth leader for nutrition. I am here today to speak out for child survival towards Agenda 2030.

I am here to advocate for nutrition financing to end malnutrition, which is the underlying cause of death for at least 3.1 million children and accounts for 45% of all deaths among children under the age of five.

Actually, I grew up in a village where malnutrition was a big issue, where our neighbours didn’t have enough food and had a big number of children, some of them stunted. The stunted children repeated a countless number of classes. Imagine how painful it is to live in a village and have 38% of children – which is 2 in 5 – stunted, affecting their academic performance and ultimately their productivity in the future. In addition, stunting will also make these children more susceptible to different diseases due to a weak immune system, increasing overall healthcare costs for them. Stunting isn’t just a physical thing: it’s an irreversible condition that affects the development of a child’s brain, which can affect a child’s ability to learn and work throughout their life.

These figures are unacceptable to me. I’m a medical student training to be a medical doctor. But I’m also a community health advocate determined to use my voice to ensure commitments to tackling malnutrition actually mean change in Rwanda – but also globally – to ensure the children in my village and my country – and worldwide – don’t suffer unnecessarily from malnutrition. Without tackling malnutrition, the scandal of preventable child deaths will continue and we will not be able to deliver on the SDGs.

In 2012, the 194 member states of the World Health Assembly endorsed the first-ever global targets to improve nutrition, focusing on six areas: stunting, exclusive breastfeeding, wasting, anaemia, low birth-weight, and overweight. And while some of the targets were enshrined within Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 2, which commits to ending malnutrition in all its forms by the year 2030, the world is not on track to achieve any of the six nutrition targets.

I acknowledge what Rwanda has done and continues to do to decrease malnutrition through various initiatives, such as:

  • the engagement of community health workers in nutrition, hygiene and family planning education
  • the implementation of breastfeeding campaigns
  • the distribution of fortified flour to pregnant mothers and infants in vulnerable families
  • the one-cow-per-poor-family programme
  • and the rolling-out of the National Early childhood development programme.

The World Bank, Results for Development Institute and 1,000 Days, with support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation, conducted an in-depth costing analysis, and they developed an investment framework for achieving four of the six global nutrition targets. However, more needs to be done, especially in nutrition financing, and the coordination of multiple stakeholders to conduct interventions since malnutrition has multiple causes.

Allow me to challenge each one of you: What do you think can be done to make progress in the journey of ending malnutrition? Why are we not able to reach these targets? For me, we need to find ways to turn these commitments into action.

I think there are three things we can do to turn our nutrition commitments into action:

  1. the realisation of financing from both donors and governments
  2. coordination and collaboration between different sectors – the creation of mutual benefits and realisation of universal health coverage
  3. inclusion of the voice of young people.

The time to commit to the investment in nutrition is now – as we have all stakeholders here to ensure greater child health and prosperity for the generation to come.