Ambassador of Belarus E.Sobolevski meets First Deputy Minister of Investment and Foreign Trade of Egypt

Source: APO


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On January 6, 2026 the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Belarus to the Arab Republic of Egypt, Evgueni Sobolevski, met with the First Deputy Minister of Investment and Foreign Trade of Egypt and Head of the Egyptian Commercial Service, Abdelaziz Al-Sherif.

The schedule of high-level visits to Belarus and meetings of bilateral cooperation bodies, including the organization of the 8th meeting of the Belarusian-Egyptian Joint Trade Commission in Minsk, was discussed.

Particular emphasis was placed on industrial cooperation, including the resumption of assembly operations for Belarusian agricultural machinery in Egypt, and the need to establish direct interbank cooperation.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Belarus.

Sudan: 1,000 days of war show the devastating cost of the ‘New World Disorder,’ says International Rescue Committee’s (IRC)

Source: APO – Report:

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Tomorrow marks 1,000 days since armed conflict erupted in Sudan, a war that has devastated lives, shattered communities, and driven the world’s largest humanitarian crisis. What began as a deadly power struggle between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has spiraled into a full-scale humanitarian disaster, marked by mass displacement, famine-level hunger, and widespread violence. 

Across the country, health systems have collapsed, sanitation and water systems are destroyed, and disease outbreaks are sweeping through overcrowded displacement sites. Humanitarian needs are far outstripping resources. Without a dramatic increase in funding and unhindered humanitarian access, more lives will be lost and communities destroyed.

Bob Kitchen, IRC’s Vice President of Emergencies, recently visited Darfur and said,

“One thousand days of war is one thousand days of failure. After 50 hours of driving across Darfur, I witnessed a stark convergence: streams of people fleeing conflict and convoys of humanitarian aid moving toward one another through a landscape of difficulty and violence. I watched families fleeing south with whatever they could carry—and at the same time saw our teams grinding north through mountain passes to meet them with health care, clean water, and cash assistance.

“El Fasher, once home to more than 1 million people, has become a grim emblem of Sudan’s descent. Those who were able to flee to Tawila have described to IRC aid workers large-scale sexual violence, executions, forced recruitment, and children separated during escape routes. 

“In Tawila, Zalingei, and El Geneina, I met people who have survived horrors most of the world will never see, yet remain determined to keep their families alive. The IRC is one of the largest providers of lifesaving services in these areas, supporting more than half a million people who have been displaced again and again by relentless violence.

“As we approach this catastrophic milestone, the world must not look away. Civilians have paid the highest price for a conflict they did not choose and need decisive international action, unfettered humanitarian access, increased funding, and real diplomatic pressure on those fueling this crisis. The people of Sudan deserve safety, dignity, and the chance to rebuild their lives.”

The IRC’s 2026 Emergency Watchlist highlights Sudan is a stark symbol of the “New World Disorder,” in which:

  • Warring parties and regional backers continue to benefit from conflict;
  • Diplomacy has repeatedly fractured, with failed ceasefires, U.N. Security Council vetoes and fragmented mediation efforts; and
  • Humanitarian funding has collapsed by 50%, leaving millions without the assistance required to survive.

The IRC urges immediate and sustained international action, including increased humanitarian funding, guarantees of safe passage for civilians and diplomatic pressure on all parties to prevent further loss of life and support pathways to peace.

– on behalf of International Rescue Committee (IRC) .

Central Sahel: Children supported to process trauma, but scale-up needed

Source: APO


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Across the Central Sahel region, millions of children carry deep mental scars resulting from exposure to extreme violence and armed conflict. Through its Better Learning Programme (BLP), the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) has helped close to 100,000 children across the region to begin to recover, giving children, teachers, and entire communities a chance to rebuild hope after trauma. A severe lack of funding means support is only available for a fraction of those in need. Donors must step up and fund these programmes at the scale this crisis demands. At the same time education authorities must ensure that mental health and psychosocial support are fully integrated into teacher training and classroom practice — as an essential part of helping children learn and thrive again.

Across Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger, which make up the Central Sahel, 12 million people now require humanitarian support, including 8.2 million children.

“Imagine a child in your care telling you: ‘I saw a motorbike hit a child until his head exploded.’ This offers a small window into the immense trauma being endured by children in some of the world’s most complex – and neglected – humanitarian crises, in the Central Sahel,” said Hassane Hamadou, NRC’s regional director for Central and West Africa.  

“Gunfire, displacement, and food insecurity have become part of daily life, with many children also witnessing terrible atrocities. Children urgently need psychosocial support to process this trauma, and to give them the tools not only to begin healing, but also for their communities to begin to rebuild.” 

Testimonies collected by NRC demonstrate that children continue to live with the trauma and sense of danger generated by such experiences long after the immediate threat has passed. Their mental wounds are compounded by a lack of educational opportunities, and an even deeper lack of psychosocial support, which both have a detrimental effect on children’s ability to learn.  

Amid these challenges, governments across the Central Sahel are showing leadership by helping to keep children learning and integrating psychosocial wellbeing into education policy and practice. NRC’s Better Learning Programme, developed in partnership with the Arctic University of Norway and implemented in partnership with education ministries, builds on this momentum. It offers a tested approach to address trauma and restore learning abilities; several countries, including Burkina Faso, are now adopting it at national scale.  

The programme, which mobilises the support network of caregivers, teachers, and counsellors, aims to restore a sense of normality, and hope. It works to provide children with the tools and techniques needed to process their trauma and regulate their emotions during times of stress. This includes breathwork and other exercises for emotional regulation. This in turn helps them to feel safer, get back to learning, and ultimately to return to some semblance of childhood. 

Many children confided in their parents and teachers, explaining how the programmes have helped them begin to recover. “These are movements that turn a sad person into a happy person,” explained one child from Dori in Burkina Faso.  “I was scared when I heard shots and I took a deep breath, it passed,” said another.

Teachers have also faced huge challenges trying to support children who lived through traumatic experiences. The programme has offered them practical support, allowing them to strengthen their own skills. “When we use the exercises, I feel calmer, more able to manage the class even when it’s crowded or noisy. It helps me to focus and not let fear take over,” reported a teacher working with the BLP programme. 

“These programmes have given a lifeline to children who have experienced situations beyond the imagination of most people,” said Hamadou. “With NRC’s work we have shown just how effective psychosocial support can be – for children, teachers, and ultimately for communities building a future.  

“It is now vital that donors invest in a way that allows these programmes to be implemented at the scale required. Ministries and educational leaders must strengthen the support they give to teachers and ensure that psychosocial support is properly integrated throughout both teacher training and the wider curriculum.”

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC).

South Africa: Water and Sanitation reports stable conditions at Vaal Dam and Bloemhof Dam

Source: APO


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The Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS) reports that the Vaal Dam and the broader Integrated Vaal River System (IVRS) continue to perform strongly, maintaining stability in line with the latest weekly reservoir status update. This positive outlook is supported by the ongoing rainfall season.

The Vaal Dam remains above full capacity, currently at 103.17%, with no measurable change compared to last week. This sustained level highlights both the resilience of the system and the effectiveness of the Department’s strategic management.

The IVRS, which supplies water to Gauteng and surrounding provinces, also reflects consistent performance, holding steady at 100.8%. Such stability underscores efficient management practices and proactive planning to strengthen drought resilience and ensure sufficient water availability ahead of the peak summer rainfall season.

Key dams within the system recorded the following status:

  • Sterkfontein Dam (Free State): Stable at 100.1%, unchanged from the previous report.
  • Bloemhof Dam: Slight decline to 98.13%.
  • Grootdraai Dam (Mpumalanga): Currently at 101.71%, reflecting a minor decrease from 102.1% previously.

Storage facilities linked to the Lesotho Highlands Water Project (LHWP) also show encouraging trends:

  • Katse Dam: Improved from 100.4% to 100.8%.
  • Mohale Dam: Recorded a marginal decrease from 102.5% to 102.3%.

These figures collectively demonstrate the strong performance of the system, supported by consistent inflows and reliable management.

DWS remains committed to maintaining a proactive approach to flood preparedness and hydrological risk management. The Department continues to track inflows closely and provides early warnings and technical updates to all relevant stakeholders.

Earlier this year, DWS advised that some dams could be maintained at higher storage levels in anticipation of a potentially dry summer. However, the latest seasonal outlook from the South African Weather Service (SAWS) now anticipates above-normal rainfall for the current season.

To support operational planning: 

  • DWS engages with SAWS monthly to review forecast conditions. 
  • Meeting frequency is increased during heavy rainfall periods to support timely decision-making. 
  • While forecasts guide strategic planning, they do not provide the precise short-term information required for real-time flood operations, which rely on local hydrological measurements. 

As the national custodian of the country’s water resources, DWS issues alerts, tracks catchment conditions, and offers technical support. Operational disaster response such as evacuations and emergency relief falls under the mandate of local, district, and metropolitan disaster management authorities.

During flood situations, DWS implements its Flood Preparedness Plan and submits continuous situation updates to the National Disaster Management Centre (NDMC) and other intergovernmental structures to maintain coordinated action across all levels of government.

The Department also underscores that water security in the IVRS should not be viewed solely through the status of the Vaal Dam. The system functions as an integrated network supported by several reservoirs and inter-basin transfer schemes, including the Lesotho Highlands Water Project.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Department of Water and Sanitation, Republic of South Africa.

South Africa: Border Management Authority intercepts unsupervised minors near Beitbridge Port of Entry

Source: APO – Report:

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The Border Management Authority (BMA), working in close collaboration with the South African National Defence Force (SANDF), has intercepted more than 20 minors near the Limpopo River in the vicinity of the Beitbridge border fence.

The children, aged between 5 and 17 years, are believed to have been en route from South Africa to Zimbabwe when they were intercepted during routine border safeguarding operations. Among the group were 10 adults; however, preliminary verification conducted by BMA officials has confirmed that only one adult is the parent of one child. The remaining minors were found to be travelling without parental supervision or lawful guardianship.

“The interception has raised serious concerns regarding child protection, possible exploitation, and non-compliance with immigration and child welfare legislation. All individuals have been placed under the care of the relevant authorities, and processes are underway to ensure the safety, wellbeing, and lawful handling of the minors in line with South African laws and international child protection protocols, Dr Masiapato said.

The BMA is working closely with SAPS, the Department of Social Development, and other relevant stakeholders to verify identities, establish circumstances surrounding the movement of the children, and determine appropriate interventions.

Dr Michael Masiapato, has reiterated the Authority’s zero-tolerance approach to the unlawful movement of children across South Africa’s borders. “The protection of vulnerable persons, particularly children, remains a priority for the BMA. We will continue to intensify joint operations with our security cluster partners to prevent exploitation and safeguard the integrity of our borders,” he said.

– on behalf of South African Government.

Department of Basic Education (DBE) Should Move From Celebrating High Percentage Passes, Committee on Education Chair

Source: APO – Report:

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The Chairperson of the Select Committee on Education, Sciences and the Creative Industries, Mr Makhi Feni, has said there is a need for emphasis on qualitative approaches in the passes for Grade 12.

He said: “For too long our focus had been on securing a high average percentage mark and no follow up on what happens after. A functioning education should allow for monitoring even post school where progress of children could be reported on.”

“The progression should apply even at higher education institutions where universities are not boggled down with bridging learners on learning areas that should have occurred at the basic education level.” He said the time for matriculating for the sake of passing Grade 12 is long gone.

“Our children should be equipped for opportunities be they academic or workplace related. We should not matriculate and then no one knows what happens after,” added Mr Feni. He also said even opportunities at TVET colleges ought to be coordinated and linked up with real skills.

Mr Feni emphasised: “Failure to do this makes a mockery of the government’s progressive stance to expand NSFAS opportunities to fund college students. Let us meaningfully and qualitatively build on these opportunities; it starts with the quality passes at Grade 12.”

The committee wished all the learners awaiting their results well and good passes.

Mr Feni said those who do not pass should not be despondent, but use the hurdle of repeating a Grade as another opportunity to jump higher in the system. The Grade 12 results will be announced on Monday and will be published in major daily newspapers on Tuesday, with schools scheduled to open on Wednesday.

ISSUED BY THE PARLIAMENTARY COMMUNICATION SERVICES ON BEHALF OF THE CHAIRPERSON OF THE SELECT COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION, SCIENCES AND CREATIVE INDUSTRIES, MR MAKHI FENI.

For media enquiries, please contact the committee’s Media Officer:

Name: Sibongile Maputi (Mr)

Cell: 081 052 6060

E-mail: smaputi@parliament.gov.za

– on behalf of Republic of South Africa: The Parliament.

South Africa’s addressing system is still not in place: a clear vision is needed

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Sharthi Laldaparsad, PhD Student, University of Pretoria

“Turn right after the first big tree; my house is the one with the yellow door.” In parts of South Africa, where settlements have grown without formal urban planning due to rapid urbanisation, that could well be a person’s “address”.

Having an address has many purposes. Not only does it allow you to find a place or person you want to visit, it’s compulsory in South Africa to provide an address when opening a bank account and registering as a voter in elections. Address locations are used to plan the delivery of services such as electricity or refuse removal and health services at clinics or education at schools. Police and health workers need addresses in emergencies.

Nowadays, address data is integrated and maintained in databases at municipalities, banks and utility providers, and used to analyse targeted interventions and developmental outcomes. Examples would be tracking the spread of communicable diseases, voter registration or service delivery trends.

South Africa has had national address standards since 2009 to make it easier to assign addresses that work in multiple systems, and to share the data. But the standards are not enforced, so the struggle with addressing persists. There is still no authoritative register of addresses in South Africa, and it’s not clear who is responsible for the governance of address data.

We work in geography and geoinformatics, an interdisciplinary field to do with collecting, managing and analysing geographical information. We recently turned to a neglected source to explore the issue of addresses: the people in government and business who actually use the information. We wanted to explore what they said about whose job it is to give everyone an address, how the data is maintained and what’s standing in the way of doing this.

Our research took a qualitative approach. We interviewed stakeholders to get their unique insights and daily experiences about what addresses are used for, how they are used, challenges that are experienced and how these are overcome. We spoke to 21 respondents across different levels of government with in-depth experience of projects, in both urban and rural settlements, as well as private companies that collect, integrate and provide address data and related services.

Our main finding was that there’s no clear vision of future address systems, or leadership on the issue. Without agreement on whether there is a problem, or whose problem it is, a resolution isn’t possible.

Categories of addresses

First we collected all the different purposes of addresses and systematically categorised them. The main categories were:

  • finding an object (for example, for postal deliveries)

  • service delivery (such as electricity)

  • identity (for example, for citizenship)

  • common reference (for example, use in a voter register or in a pandemic).

The broad spectrum of address purposes suggests that addresses are essential to society, governance and the economy in a modern world.

So what’s standing in the way of better address coverage?

Need for governance: The interviews confirmed that stakeholders need clear rules, regulations, processes and structures to guide decisions, allocate resources and ensure accountability about addresses and address data. Most of the respondents considered addresses to be necessary for socio-economic development.


Read more: ‘Walk straight’: how small-town residents navigate without street signs and names


Leadership: These responses suggest that the societal problem of addressing is not (yet) clearly identified and defined. That makes it difficult to determine who should legitimately resolve the problem, for whom and how.

Interviewees raised concerns about leadership and vision at different levels of government affecting the country’s ability to solve the address issue. They agreed that the task had not been assigned to municipalities, which have many other pressing priorities and limited resources. The South African Post Office could play a role. But it has been placed in business rescue.

Adapting to gaps: In this constrained environment, stakeholders resort to short-term “fixes” that don’t have systemic impact. For example, some municipalities assign numbers to dwellings based on aerial photography, or barcodes on dwellings, or only locate the main assembly points in their jurisdiction, to fulfil their own responsibilities. So nothing changes: addresses and address data are incomplete and of poor quality.

Respondents also made suggestions.

Some questioned whether addresses were needed at all. They said there were other ways of finding a house or a business, such as navigating to a coordinate shared via Google Maps, or using verbal directions.

Some suggested that the uncertainty about responsibilities could be an opportunity for the private sector. It is already collecting address information from various sources like municipalities, then standardising, integrating and making available address data and related services, at a cost.

However, as is the case with many other services in the country, rural areas may be left behind where there is no economic incentive. Access to private data becomes unaffordable for government and society at large.

Ending the aimlessness

The deficiencies and adaptations in South Africa suggest that addressing is in a state of aimlessness.

How to fix the problem will require a number of interventions.

Firstly, there need to be decisions, actions and institutional commitments towards long-term strategies that will stop the drift. For example, cities and municipalities should strive for full coverage of addresses. They should also improve the quality and standardisation of the data, so that they are more useful.

Secondly, there’s a need for innovation and investment to transform and strengthen the governance of the country’s addressing infrastructure. For example, the European Commission recommends e-government based on a set of interlinked registers for property, addresses, people, business and vehicles.

Thirdly, data collection platforms and databases should be designed with the understanding that different types of addresses are in use – it could be a street name and number, or an informal description. Different types of addresses should have equal validity or credibility.


Read more: South Africa needs a national database of addresses: how it could be done


At a more technical level, address metadata (information about the data) should make it possible for different systems to use it.

Addresses connect us to society – locally to our community and globally to the rest of the world. Addresses are essential for socio-economic growth and good governance in cities and municipalities.

– South Africa’s addressing system is still not in place: a clear vision is needed
– https://theconversation.com/south-africas-addressing-system-is-still-not-in-place-a-clear-vision-is-needed-268135

The Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO) and Rustenburg Local Municipality to host a public participation event in Rustenburg

Source: APO


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The Department of International Relations and Cooperation, in collaboration with the Rustenburg Local Municipality, will host a public participation event on Friday, 9 January 2026, at the Civic Centre in Rustenburg under the theme: Advancing People-Centred Development.

The event will be hosted by International Relations and Cooperation Minister Ronald Lamola, supported by Deputy Minister Alvin Botes. The event forms part of DIRCO’s nation-wide public participation efforts linked to South Africa’s G20 Presidency and the historic G20 Leaders’ Summit hosted in November 2025.

The event further serves as a follow-up to the G20 Townhall Engagement hosted in Rustenburg on 30 October 2025, themed Inclusive Economic Growth and Just Transition for Sustainable Societal Development.

The engagement seeks to provide stakeholders with an opportunity to engage on key outcomes of the G20 Leaders’ Summit and the G20 Social Summit, as well as to explore opportunities in the mining sector and other emerging sectors such as agriculture and tourism.

Members of the media are invited as follows:

Date: Friday, 9 January 2026
Time: 09:30 for 10:00
Venue: Civic Centre, Rustenburg

Media RSVP: rakgakolem@dirco.gov.za

ISSUED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND COOPERATION

OR Tambo Building
460 Soutpansberg Road
Rietondale
Pretoria
0084

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Republic of South Africa: Department of International Relations and Cooperation.

Benin: Election candidates must commit to protecting human rights amid shrinking civic space

Source: APO


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As voters prepare to go to the polls in Benin, candidates running in the country’s legislative and municipal elections on 11 January 2026, and presidential election on 12 April 2026, must commit to prioritizing human rights, Amnesty International and 13 civil society organizations said. The organizations have published a manifesto setting out key human rights priorities for the incoming authorities.

“Civic space continues to shrink in Benin with a wave of attacks on independent media outlets and people still being arbitrarily arrested and detained for dissent. Despite progress, women and marginalized groups face discrimination, while forced evictions jeopardize the human rights of thousands of people. The right to a fair trial and access to justice are some of the issues the incoming authorities must urgently address,” said Dieudonné Dagbéto, Executive Director of Amnesty International Benin.

Protect freedom of expression, association, and peaceful assembly 

Several newspapers and websites in Benin have been suspended under the Digital Code, which criminalizes the ‘publication of false information’ and ‘harassment through electronic communications’. It is essential to revise this Code in alignment with international human rights standards, and the recommendations accepted by the authorities during the last Universal Periodic Review.

The authorities continue to disproportionately restrict the right to protest. They must guarantee the right to freedom of peaceful assembly by revising the criminal Code which currently prohibits “any unarmed gathering that could disturb public peace”, allowing for peaceful protests to be banned on vague grounds.

In recent years, security forces have dispersed peaceful protests with excessive force and arbitrarily arrested individuals. Prompt, thorough, and impartial investigations must be conducted into every alleged case of excessive use of force, and those arbitrarily detained must be released.

The relatives of those allegedly killed by security forced during protests in 2019 are still waiting for justice. We call for the revision of the 2019 amnesty law to ensure their access to justice and remedy.

More humane prison conditions

Despite efforts from the authorities, prisoners still sleep in overcrowded cells. To combat prison overcrowding, pretrial detention should be used as a last resort, and judicial proceedings should be expedited. Laws and decrees offering alternatives to imprisonment for minor offences should be enforced. It is also essential to improve prisoners’ access to drinking water and sanitation, as well as healthcare, including adequate facilities and qualified medical staff, and to investigate allegations of torture and other ill-treatment.

Better access to justice

Opposition political figures continue to be arbitrarily detained, as confirmed by the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention. There must be an end to arbitrary detention and all persons detained without legal grounds or in violation of human rights must be released. The effective implementation of legal aid would be a major step forward. The jurisdiction of the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights to receive complaints directly from individuals and NGOs must also be restored.

Promoting gender equality and protecting the most marginalized

Women remain underrepresented in political decision-making bodies, parliament, and senior management positions. Urgent measures are needed to increase women’s representation and achieve gender equality.

In 2024, the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities deemed access to health and education services for persons with disabilities to be insufficient. The manifesto calls for the training and recruitment of teachers in sign language and other media, as well as the creation of centres for children with intellectual disabilities and support for private centres.

Due to the spillover of the conflict affecting the Central Sahel, attacks by armed groups in the north of Benin resulted in 27,294 internally displaced persons and 30,540 refugees and asylum seekers as of November 2025, according to the UNHCR. Most of them, deprived of their land and livestock, have difficulty accessing basic services. The incoming authorities must respect international obligations to protect refugees and displaced persons, and coordinate humanitarian assistance effectively.

Strengthening access to economic, social, and cultural rights

Since 2021, development projects have resulted in thousands of people being forcibly evicted, many of them without prior and fair compensation. Elected authorities must ensure fair compensation and adequate and safe rehousing solutions for all victims of forced evictions.

Despite a 2021 Constitutional Court ruling, women were kept locked up in the Mènontin district hospital in 2023 for non-payment of medical fees. While recognizing that the authorities have corrected this situation, the manifesto calls for effective access to maternity care and essential health services and for an end to the illegal practice of detaining patients.

In 2018, the right to strike was reduced to 10 days per year for almost all public and private sector employees, with a total ban in the health sector. In 2022, this ban was extended to other categories of workers. We call for the revision of the 2018 and 2022 laws to guarantee the right to strike, and to apply restrictions only to essential services.

“Our recommendations are not exhaustive, but they provide a roadmap for strengthening respect for human rights. We call on all political parties and candidates to commit to this,” said Dieudonné Dagbéto.

Signatories:

Amnesty International
Association des Blogueurs du Bénin
Association des Jeunes Juristes du Bénin
Association des Jeunes Juristes Diplomates et Politistes du Bénin (AJJuDIP Bénin)
Centre de formation en mécanisme de protection des droits humains
Coalition des défenseurs des droits humains (CDDH) Bénin
Commission béninoise des droits de l’Homme
Human Rights Priority
Internet society (ISOC) – Bénin
Social Watch Bénin (SWB)
Union des Scolaires et Étudiants du Bénin
Union nationale des médias en ligne (UNAMEL)
Voix et actions citoyennes
Wanep – Bénin

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Amnesty International.

Zimbabwe: Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) agricultural voucher system boosts food security and promotes protection from sexual exploitation and abuse

Source: APO


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The Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO), in collaboration with the Government of Zimbabwe funded by the French Government, coordinated the Agricultural Voucher System as part of the Nourish and Thrive: Inclusive and Sustainable Nutrition and Livelihoods Initiative Project. This coordinated effort aims to enhance food security and nutrition by providing rural households with subsidized access to high-quality agricultural inputs, thereby fostering resilient and sustainable livelihoods in drought-affected regions. 

This initiative tackles urgent nutrition and food security challenges in regions of Masvingo and Mwenezi districts affected by drought, specifically supporting rural households impacted by the El Niño-induced crisis. By distributing subsidised agricultural input packages through a voucher system, the project empowers farmers to obtain high-quality, drought-tolerant seeds and essential resources. This approach not only improves access to resilient agricultural inputs but also strengthens households’ capacity to recover and thrive despite adverse climate conditions, promoting long-term food security and sustainable livelihoods. 

The voucher distribution event brought together local leadership, agro-dealers, and project participants, marking a significant step towards inclusive and sustainable agrifood systems transformation. The programme targeted 4,000 households across selected wards in Masvingo and Mwenezi, ensuring timely access to nutritious crops and promoting resilience in the face of climate shocks. 

In addition to boosting agricultural productivity, the mission placed strong emphasis on Protection from Sexual Exploitation and Abuse (PSEA), underscoring FAO’s steadfast dedication to safeguarding vulnerable community members. Participants received comprehensive education on effective strategies to prevent exploitation and abuse by humanitarian workers and development partners, fostering a culture of awareness and accountability throughout the programme. 

“A stitch in time saves nine. It is important that we share the information we learnt with our colleagues and teams and create awareness to prevent exploitation and abuse,” said Ruramai Sibiya from World Vision Zimbabwe highlighting the importance of proactive awareness.  

During the mission, FAO trained Voucher Redeeming Suppliers (VRS) on the FAO’s Identification, Delivery and Empowerment Application (IDEA) platform. The IDEA platform is a digital ecosystem of applications designed to protect and manage beneficiary data, deliver assistance, and distribute aid using cash and voucher modalities ensuring smooth voucher redemption and transparency in input delivery. The training covered system navigation, troubleshooting, and customer service best practices. Local leadership engagement and on-site monitoring further strengthened accountability and efficiency. 

Embedded in its implementation strategy, the Nourish and Thrive project also seeks to increase awareness and strengthen prevention measures against sexual exploitation and abuse among all stakeholders, reinforcing FAO’s commitment to safeguarding vulnerable communities while promoting inclusive and sustainable agrifood systems. 

“The training on Prevention of Sexual Exploitation and Abuse was very much educative, and I followed it properly. I thank the FAO team for this opportunity,” said Dumisani Simango, an agro-dealer from Masvingo, expressing his appreciation for this initiative.  

FAO remains committed to building resilient agrifood systems and upholding the highest standards of protection and accountability. Through initiatives like the Nourish and Thrive Project, FAO ensures that communities not only recover from climate shocks but also thrive in safe, inclusive environments. 

FAO’s PSEA Focal Person, Leticia Njowola, emphasized that reinforcing PSEA is anchored on FAO’s zero-tolerance policy, which applies to all UN personnel, implementing partners, and service providers. 

“Preventing and protecting against sexual exploitation and abuse is a priority in the humanitarian and development sector. Any form of exploitation or abuse violates people’s rights and undermines programme sustainability and impact. At a policy level, embedding PSEA measures ensures institutional accountability, strengthens governance frameworks, and reinforces trust between implementing partners and the communities they serve, critical for achieving inclusive and rights-based sustainable agrifood systems transformation,” Njowola said. 

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO): Regional Office for Africa.