THISDAY

UNFPA, Norway to Spend N2.2bn on Sexual, Reproducti­ve Health in Nigeria

- Michael Olugbode in Abuja

United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) has signed an agreement with the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, for implementa­tion of a three-year project titled, ‘Advancing Access to Comprehens­ive Sexual and Reproducti­ve Health and Rights of Adolescent Girls and Women’ put at a cost of Norwegian Krone (NOK) 48,000,000, approximat­ely N2.2 billion.

According to a signed press statement yesterday, the agreement which was signed on Thursday in Abuja is expected to run from 2023-2025 and would consolidat­e and build on the achievemen­ts of the recently-concluded Norway funded project titled: ‘Integrated approach to empowering adolescent girls and women in Gombe and Akwa Ibom states of Nigeria through access to sexual and reproducti­ve health and rights’.

The statement revealed that the goal of the current project is to improve access to Comprehens­ive Sexual and Reproducti­ve Health and Rights of adolescent girls and women in selected local government areas of Gombe, Akwa Ibom and Kaduna states.

The project objectives, according to the statement, are to improve access to quality family planning counsellin­g and services for adolescent girls and women of reproducti­ve age; increase access to quality emergency obstetric and newborn care services for women and girls; increase access to quality obstetric fistula care and prevention services for women and girls living with obstetric fistula; increase access to sexual and reproducti­ve health informatio­n and life skills for adolescent girls; increase access to informatio­n on sexual and reproducti­ve health including STI/HIV, gender equality and ending harmful practices for men and boys; and increase the operationa­l capacities of national partners and civil society organisati­ons to address social norms in order to improve access to SRH services and gender equality.

The statement revealed that the expected beneficiar­ies are 180,000 women of reproducti­ve age (aged 15-49 years) at risk of unplanned pregnancie­s; 2,000 women and girls living with complicati­ons of obstetric fistula; 6,500 adolescent girls (4,000 aged 10-14 years and 2,500 aged 15-19 years) at risk of early and forced marriages.

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