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Extra $10M In Grants For Women Announced By UN

UN Trust Fund To End Violence Against Women Announces Additional US$10 Million In Grants To Fund Grassroots Efforts To Protect Women And Girls
On-the-ground innovative efforts to be supported in 18 countries by the multilateral Fund

United Nations, New York — The United Nations Trust Fund in Support of Actions to Eliminate Violence against Women (UN Trust Fund) today announced US$10 million in grants to 13 initiatives in 18 countries. The grants complete the UN Trust Fund’s 14th grant-making cycle of 2009, delivering a total of US$20.5 million for 26 projects in 33 countries and territories. Belarus, the Marshall Islands and Sri Lanka are first-time grant recipients of the UN Trust Fund.

The UN Trust Fund is the only multilateral grant-making mechanism exclusively devoted to supporting local and national efforts to end violence against women and girls. Established by the United Nations in 1996, the Fund is managed by the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM, part of UN Women), on behalf of the United Nations system.

“Violence against women destroys families, fractures communities and hampers progress on development goals,” said Inés Alberdi, Executive Director, UNIFEM. “But it is problem with a solution. Only by intensifying support and increasing investment to national and local efforts can we ensure women and girls are safe from violence and can lead healthy, productive lives. The UN Trust Fund’s ability to award these additional grants is a welcome sign towards translating pledges by government and international donors into resources to support action on the ground,” she added.

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With these grants, the UN Trust Fund will have supported 317 programmes in 124 countries and territories with more than US$60 million to date. However, resources for the UN Trust Fund fall drastically short of the vast demand. For the current grant cycle alone, the Fund was able to meet less than 3 percent of the demand: a total of 1,643 applications with grant requests totalling US$857 million were received. The UN Trust Fund could award only a total of US$20.5 million to 26 projects covering 33 countries and territories.

The United Nations Secretary-General’s campaign UNiTE to End Violence against Women includes a specific target of raising US$100 million annually for the UN Trust Fund by 2015, in recognition of the urgent need to address violence against women and the Fund being a pioneering inter-agency initiative to advance progress on the ground to respond to this pervasive human rights violation.

The new UN Trust Fund grantees will spearhead pioneering approaches worldwide, including:

In Turkey, the Mother Child Education Foundation will model a highly innovative programme engaging fathers in the prevention of gender-based violence within the family;

The Jordanian Women’s Union will establish the first regional NGO network in Egypt, Jordan and Morocco to tackle trafficking and protect women migrant workers’ rights;

In Cambodia, Nepal and Uganda, Acid Survivors Trust International will pilot and upscale groundbreaking strategies for ending acid burning against women;

In China, Beijing Cultural Development Centre for Rural Women will develop protection mechanisms for girls “left behind” and at risk of sexual abuse in the countryside, while their parents pursue work in urban centres;

In Peru, Asociación de Comunicadores Sociales Calandria will empower rural adolescent girls to become leaders in the anti-violence movement ;

In the Marshall Islands, Women United Together Marshall Islands will strengthen domestic violence legislation and protocols, ensure enactment of culturally sensitive laws, and establish a gender responsive national policy;

In Burundi, the Ministry of Human Rights and Gender will focus on sexual and domestic violence, with an emphasis on prevention of violence in schools; and

UN Country Teams in Belarus, Sri Lanka and Indonesia will support multi-sectoral interventions to enforce national laws addressing violence against women and girls. Read more about the UN Trust Fund Grantees

ENDS

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