By Victoria Lewis | Digital Marketing
Dullassa is one of the least developed and most remote places in the Afar Region in Ethiopia. It is located in the southerly district of the Region, where for part of the year, the roads are inaccessible due to floods. The communities are highly illiterate leaving them very bound to traditional culture, with issues such as Female Genital Mutilation (FGM), early marriages and related practices still very prevalent.
The communities are subservient to the highland commercial farming production on their land, and many individuals do not enter into daily labour for an income. In the last 12 months their livelihoods have further declined through market isolation, cost of inflation, previous malnutrition due to livestock loss in drought, and the men of the district participating in the conflicts facing the region with the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF).This has caused undue tension and uncertainty in the region and on livelihoods.
The fourth year of the project commenced in July 2021, and concluded this month - June 2022. Your donations have helped to contribute to the outcomes below.
New figues will be released soon, however as of early this year the following activities were carried out:
Ahadi is a young woman who lives in one of the communities in which BKFA support, and is now a Trained Birth Attendant. She says this is the first time women and girls have understood their rights and how they should be protected within society. Ahadi also works with 5 other trained TBAs from her community, all of who are trained on the harmful practices, safe motherhood and family planning.
After the educational programs delivered in the past two years, she tells us that more people are willing to discuss and share stories of women and girls who have suffered. The community has reached a point where the closing of the vaginal area after the birth is not done, and the cutting has reduced to the clitoris and the remaining perineum is not closed. She works with 5 mothers who have not allowed any type of FGM on their children. She’s encouraging the mothers to convince other families. She tries to be at all births to know if the baby is a boy or a girl, and uses opportunities such as weddings or school visits to talk to young girls and boys about the dangers of FGM as well as forced marriages.
Ahadi is very happy to be a WEW and being able to see how things are changing for the future. Men are helping women have support during the deliveries; taking them to the Dullassa Health Center when there's risks and problems such as bleeding. It has been two years and there has not been any maternal death in her community.
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