The Manila Times

UN envoy seeks support for reproducti­ve health

- UN DAILY NEWS

IN this century, child marriage is not allowed and similarly, children should not give birth to children, the United Nations youth envoy told an African forum on reproducti­ve health and rights on Wednesday (Thursday in Manila).

“There are high levels of adolescent pregnancy virtually everywhere in the continent. Africa has the highest levels of teenage pregnancy in the world. The larger part of them occur within marriage,” said Jayathma Wickramana­yake, the UN Secretary General’s Special Envoy on Youth, at the opening ceremony of the eighth Africa Conference on Sexual and Reproducti­ve Health and Rights held in Johannesbu­rg, South Africa.

She said that the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, adopted by all UN Member States two-anda-half years ago, acknowledg­es that increased attention to the health and well-being of the world’s adolescent girls, including their sexual and reproducti­ve health, is a necessary condition for success.

“A cross- sectoral approach is critical to ensure the holistic developmen­t of young women, as well as young men, as we know that negative sexual and reproducti­ve health outcomes impact on so many other issues in a young person’s life,” she stressed.

Ms. Wickramana­yake noted that the millions of adolescent girls drop out of school due to child marriage and teenage pregnancy, and millions more still miss out on their education during their menstrual cycle because of the lack of sanitation facilities at their schools.

The lack of employment opportunit­ies impacts those who become mothers while being children themselves, or those who are found to be HIV positive.

With the world today faced with the largest generation of youth in its history, these 1.8 billion people between the ages of 10 to 24 are the torchbeare­rs of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs). Meaningful youth engagement and participat­ion is critical to the achievemen­t of the 2030 Agenda.

“Nowhere is this more critical than right here in the African continent, the only region that will continue to see its youth population­s grow in the decades to come,” she said.

Africa continues to be faced with high levels of maternal mortality and morbidity. It is unacceptab­le that women continue to die while giving life. AIDS is still among the leading causes of death among adolescent­s in Sub-Saharan Africa.

All of this requires concerted efforts to ensure young people everywhere have access to quality, affordable and accessible sexual and reproducti­ve health services.

She said during her multi-country visit across the continent, which took her to Senegal, the Gambia, Ghana, Nigeria, and South Africa, she witnessed the youthful energy that is driving creativity and new solutions to old problems, through technology and innovation.

It is young people who will drive the developmen­t of this region over the next several decades, and investing in young people is the recipe to the realizatio­n and achievemen­t of the SDGs and other national and regional developmen­t frameworks, in particular the African Union 2063 Agenda.

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