Tuesday, October 28, 2008

UNIFEM- SAY NO CAMPAIGN- 1 million signatures

UPDATE- 12/12/08- go to www.saynotoviolence to find the FABULOUS RESULTS!)


30 days and counting to reach Say NO campaign one million signatures goal ...




Dear Friends,
Thanks to you,
more than 375,000 individuals have given their names to UNIFEM to be counted in the Say NO to Violence against Women campaign, helping to break the silence and give voice to women and girls who have experienced violence.


The 25 November challenge? To deliver one million names to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on 25 November.


Why is it so important? To demonstrate the broad-based international support for making ending violence against women a top priority.
How to beat the challenge? Spread and post UNIFEM’s Say NO Widget — specially designed for websites:If you have a website, blog or social networking site (for example, Facebook, MySpace), you can put the Say NO to Violence against Women widget on your page and collect names for the campaign right on your website.

Go to http://rocketxl.com/unifem
Click on “Embed” Press the Facebook, MySpace or LiveJournal button (depending on the type of networking site you have), Or “click here to grab code” — the code will be copied to your clipboard and you can paste it on your homepage or organization’s website.


That’s it! Now you can collect names and keep track of how many people have said NO on your website. Please Use and Spread the Say NO Widget


Organizations and webmasters prominently post the UNIFEM Say NO widget on your organization’s home page.
Use the widget to start a friendly competition among organization members — offer a prize or recognition and watch the numbers climb.


Send to members a “Say NO campaign bulletin” that features the widget tool.
Involve young people in the effort — experts in social media, Facebook, MySpace, etc.
Because of the technical requirements, the Widget works in the Flash computer language and not HTML. The current UNIFEM HTML-based site,
http://www.saynotoviolence.org/, continues to run, so please, make full use of it.


Thank you so much for being a key outreach advocate. Please send feedback or questions to Rita Gibbons (rita.gibbons@unifem.org) of the UNIFEM Say NO Outreach Team.


As we race to 25 November, we’ll continue to report back on progress.
—Nanette Braun, UNIFEM Communications—Joan Libby-Hawk, UNIFEM Public Affairs

Thursday, October 23, 2008

MORE NEW SI NEWS FOR MEMBERS!

INFORMATION SENT TO THE SI FEDERATIONS


1. Commission on the Status of Women March 2009 United Nations New York- A letter was sent to each Federation inviting them to participate in CSW 2009. The The theme this year is focused on The equal sharing of responsibilities between women and men, including caregiving in the context of HIV/AIDS. Soroptimist members will want to contact their Federations to learn more about participation in CSW .

2. BEST PRACTICES Award Themes Announced for the Next three years! Following is an excerpt from the recent letter being distributed through each federation:

SOROPTIMIST INTERNATIONAL BEST PRACTICE AWARDS- Strategy for 2008-2011

The SI Best Practice Awards are given annually to acknowledge projects of excellence planned and carried out by Soroptimists all over the world. Each year the theme for the awards changes to reflect the wide variety of work done.

For the next three years we want to ‘focus on the Focus’! There are ten Programme Focus Objectives for the present Quadrennium and focusing on these over the next three years will celebrate the wide variety of projects we do.
2008-2009 will focus on objectives 1-4
2009-2010 will focus on objectives 5-7
2010-2011 will focus on objectives 8-10

The SI Programme Focus Objectives are listed in full on the website http://www.soroptimistinternational.org/

This year the projects awarded will reflect work done on the following objectives:-
1.‘Eliminate poverty and gender discrimination through ensuring women’s full social and economic rights’
2.‘End human trafficking and all forms of violence against women and girls’
3.‘Ensure access to health care for women and girls’
4.‘Support programmes and policies that eliminate HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis and other major diseases


Please be looking out for projects to put forward for the awards through your federations. Full details will follow shortly.
We know that there will be many to choose from, and that choices are often difficult but we want to celebrate best practice in our organisation.Please address any queries to Margaret Cook, Assistant Programme Director. programme.assistant@soroptimistinternational.org

What's New!

1. New Programme Focus Form launched! Try out the on-line report form via this link: http://www.soroptimistinternational.org/html/online_reporting.html

http://www.soroptimistinternational.org/

2. Report from DPI/ NGO ( Department of Public Information and Non Governmnental Organizations Conference) held in Paris at UNESCO in September 2008. SI had 8 participants including 3 under 30 year old women who competed through an application process to be chosen to be part of the delegation. The final report has been finished with thoughts from each of the attendees.

New Information From the UN on Obstetric Fistula

*13 October 2008*
*UNITED NATIONS, New York*—As the first-ever report <http://www.unfpa.org/fistula/docs/sg_obstetric_fistula.pdf> by the United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon presented to Member States the Campaign to End Fistula announced a fourfold increase in the number of countries it serves. According to its annual report, the campaign now works to prevent and treat fistula in over 45 countries in Africa, Asia and the Arab States. When the Campaign to End Fistula was launched in 2003, it covered 12 countries.
The Secretary-General’s report on supporting efforts to end obstetric fistula, issued in response to a request by the General Assembly, outlines efforts to end obstetric fistula and help achieve Millennium Development Goal 5 (Improve Maternal Health), including strengthening health systems and increasing funding.
At least 2 million women in Africa, Asia and the Arab region are living with obstetric fistula, a hole in the birth canal caused by prolonged labour without prompt medical intervention. Every year some 50,000 to 100,000 new cases develop, with severe social and medical consequences for the women affected.
“The consequences of fistula are life shattering,” said Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, Executive Director of UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund. “The baby often dies and the woman is left with chronic incontinence, greatly diminishing her prospects for work and family life.”
While obstetric fistula is uncommon in countries where births are attended by skilled medical workers and emergency obstetric care is available, and where women can exercise their right to determine the number and spacing of their children, it occurs disproportionately among poor girls and women, especially those living far from medical services and with lack of access to family planning.
Launched by UNFPA and partners, the global Campaign to End Fistula <http://www.endfistula.org/> aims at eliminating fistula by 2015 by preventing it and restoring the health and dignity of women living with its consequences. The campaign’s annual report, released today, shows that it is active in 45 countries and has supported treatment for over 7,800 women. In 2007 alone, the Campaign provided training for more than 500 professionals in fistula treatment and care and strengthened the capacity to provide fistula treatment in 89 health centres. Since 2003, the campaign has raised more than $25 million in contributions and educated tens of thousands of individuals, community leaders and policymakers about fistula.
“Because of poverty, women suffering from fistula lack the means to cover the full cost of their surgery," said Dr. Dolores Nembunzu, a fistula surgeon in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. “Through advocacy we can reach the women who are hidden, and give them support and access to information about treatment."
While affecting the most vulnerable members of society, fistula touches on reproductive health and rights, gender equality, poverty and adolescent reproductive health. Like maternal death, fistula is almost entirely preventable, but its persistence signals that health systems are currently failing to meet women's needs.