Friday, 29 March 2024 00:00

Decriminalization of HIV through empowerment of young women discussed in Khujand

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Decriminalization of HIV by empowering young women living with HIV in Tajikistan was discussed during the round table.

According to official data, 13070 cases of HIV infection (8,342 men and 4,728 women) were registered in Tajikistan from 1991 to December 2020. The main ways of HIV transmission in the Republic of Tatarstan: 60% sexually, 29.4% by injection, 6.7% uncertain, 3.9% from mother to child%

This was stated by Tahmina Haidarova, director of the republican NGO "Tajik Network of Women Living with HIV" during a round table held in Khujand.

The event was organized within the framework of the project "Decriminalization of HIV by empowering young women and girls living with HIV in the Republic of Tajikistan", which is supported by the American Embassy in Tajikistan.

The objectives of the project are to inform law enforcement officials and decision makers about human rights, stigma, discrimination, and HIV-related violence, and international standards in the field of protection

Read more: https://sugdnews.com/2021/11/22/v-hudzhande-obsudili-dekriminalizaciju-vich-putem-rasshirenija-prav-molodyh-zhenshhin/

739670 view (s) Last modified on Sunday, 31 March 2024 17:45

35495 comments

  • Comment Link Elektrokarniz_jcsa Friday, 09 August 2024 20:49 posted by Elektrokarniz_jcsa

    прокарниз прокарниз .

  • Comment Link RichardFouct Friday, 09 August 2024 15:11 posted by RichardFouct

    A chainsaw amnesty is protecting the rainforest in Borneo
    мму отзывы

    Borneo was once covered in lush, dense rainforests, but they are rapidly disappearing. The Southeast Asian island, roughly three times the size of the UK, has lost half its forest cover since the 1930s, destroying precious habitat for wildlife such as the critically endangered orangutan, as well as valuable carbon stores.

    A non-profit called Health in Harmony (HIH) is asking farmers to hand in their chainsaws in return for money, and a chance to set up an alternative livelihood.

    Borneo is divided between Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei, and it is estimated that up to 10% of its land is taken up by industrial palm oil and logging operations. But deforestation isn’t just about large-scale tree clearance; some of those behind the logging are small-scale farmers, cutting trees as a sideline to make ends meet.

    Buyback and healthcare
    HIH launched its chainsaw buyback scheme in 2017, under the group’s Indonesian name, Alam Sehat Lestari (ASRI). Farmers who illegally log and sell the wood to timber companies are given around $200 for their chainsaws, as well as up to $450 in financial support for them to set up an alternative, sustainable livelihood, such as opening a shop, organic farming and even beekeeping.

    The scheme also involves addressing the root causes of the problem. According to HIH, many of the farmers who turn to logging do so because they need the money for basics like healthcare.

    “They live far from the healthcare clinics, and they see logging as a place where they can get quick cash,” explained Mahardika “Dika” Putra, conservation program manager at HIH. “If they need this amount of money, they cut this amount of trees.

    “We asked what solutions they think they need to live in harmony with the forest and they said, ‘high quality, affordable healthcare, and training in organic farming.’”

  • Comment Link pochemubuh Friday, 09 August 2024 00:42 posted by pochemubuh

    Почему во сне тяжело бежать? https://e-pochemuchka.ru/pochemu-vo-sne-tyazhelo-bezhat/

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