vimarsana.com

Latest Breaking News On - பாலியல் ஜெஂடர் அடிப்படையிலானது வன்முறை - Page 4 : vimarsana.com

Liberia: President Weah Caps Celebration of International Women s Day with Unveiling of DNA Machines to Aid Investigation of Rape Cases

Liberia: President Weah Caps Celebration of International Women’s Day with Unveiling of DNA Machines to Aid Investigation of Rape Cases Liberia: President Weah Caps Celebration of International Women’s Day with Unveiling of DNA Machines to Aid Investigation of Rape Cases Share Monrovia – It was a house full of joy on International Women’s Day when the Government of Liberia through President George Weah, joined by Vice President Jewel Howard Taylor and international Development partners unveiled the nation’s first public DNA machine. The gigantic machine was purchased by the government to aid in the investigation of rape as result of a recommendation by the Inter-Ministerial Taskforce on Sexual Gender-Based Violence (ITSGBV) set up by President Weah in 2020 amid sustained protests by rights activists over the alarming rate of Sexual and Gender Based Violence (SGBV) cases.

Sponsor culture nothing short of an epidemic

These relationships are carried on without proper consideration [Photo: Shutterstock] This practice is rooted in other Sub-Saharan cultures as well. In South Africa, for instance, ‘blessers’, a connotation for sugar daddies is nothing short of an epidemic so much that it caught the attention of the country’s then-president, Jacob Zuma, who spoke out against them. Zuma’s concern springs from research findings that prove that the ‘blessers’ are an influential factor driving the transmission of HIV in South Africa. In Kenya, this is no different. In many cases, these relationships are carried on without proper consideration of the consequences. According to AVERT, an NGO dedicated to providing research information about HIV/Aids, the sugar-daddy trend predisposes young women to a substantially higher risk of contracting HIV. According to the National Aids Control Council (NACC), HIV prevalence for women in Kenya stands at seven per cent, as opposed to 4.7 percent for men

Sponsor: How fleeting aspirational lifestyles puts young people at risk

These relationships are carried on without proper consideration [Photo: Shutterstock] This practice is rooted in other Sub-Saharan cultures as well. In South Africa, for instance, ‘blessers’, a connotation for sugar daddies is nothing short of an epidemic so much that it caught the attention of the country’s then-president, Jacob Zuma, who spoke out against them. Zuma’s concern springs from research findings that prove that the ‘blessers’ are an influential factor driving the transmission of HIV in South Africa. In Kenya, this is no different. In many cases, these relationships are carried on without proper consideration of the consequences. According to AVERT, an NGO dedicated to providing research information about HIV/Aids, the sugar-daddy trend predisposes young women to a substantially higher risk of contracting HIV. According to the National Aids Control Council (NACC), HIV prevalence for women in Kenya stands at seven per cent, as opposed to 4.7 percent for men

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.