UNICEF: Granting Hope for Broken Dreams
PRESS RELEASE
Lesotho launches Child Grants payment in Semonkong, Maseru district - the third and final pilot area - bringing hope to an increasing number of vulnerable children.
Lesotho 28 October 2009 – It
took several years for the foundations of the ambitious
[Government of Lesotho, European Union and UNICEF supported]
Child Grants Programme to be established, but finally its
seeds are bearing fruits. With remarkable impetus, the
programme has been rolled out in the third and final pilot
district of Maseru, Semonkong community council, (about 150
Km from the capital), on 27 October.
Mpolokeng, an 18
year old girl and Sello, an 18 year old boy, come from
different walks and have met for the first time at the
launch. Their lives would be so far apart were it not for a
common thread that binds them together. Both Mpolokeng and
Sello lost their parents; both are heading their households
and struggling to make ends meet, and both are waiting to
receive their cash grants in Semonkong. Mpolokeng’s father
was working in the South African mines, and so was Sello’s
father.
“My father was a very strong man, I used to
be so happy every time he came home from the mines because
he used to bring us fresh apples, sweet potatoes and
gifts” recalls Mpolokeng with a smile. “But over time he
started getting sick and finally came home for good, to die.
Then my mother got sick and I had to take care of her and my
siblings and had to drop out of school” she says with
glaring sadness. Mpolokeng’s father, just like Sello’s
father, returned from the mines very sick and died shortly
after, followed by his wife.
Sello also remembers
his father with evident pain “He used to love animals, we
had many cattle and when he came home from the mines we used
to herd them together. I miss him, I also love cattle just
like him. When he died, my mother followed, so we used some
of our cattle for the funerals. I had to take care of the
remaining cattle and of my siblings” he recalls. Sello is
now left with one cow after losing a young calf to the harsh
weather conditions.
Mpolokeng and Sello are the face
of thousands of Basotho children confronted with enormous
odds. The triple threat of poverty, HIV and AIDS and food
insecurity has dealt a serious blow to children’s
survival, development and protection in Lesotho. More than
180,000 children are orphans, robbed of the protective and
nurturing role of their mothers and fathers. Of these
100,000 are estimated to have lost one or both parents to
AIDS.
Despite the great challenges they face, both
Mpolokeng and Sello possess an astounding resilience. Both
have hopes and dreams for the future and are excited at the
possibilities offered by the cash grants they are about to
receive.
“My greatest wish is to go back to school
so that one day I can become a teacher and help other
children learn and grow” says Mpolokeng. “The money I
will receive today will help me to buy myself a uniform so
that next year I can enroll in school again” she admits
with pride. On the other hand, Sello is chasing after his
father’s legacy to make sure his siblings have a future.
Now an experienced herd boy he voices his passion “Cows
are my life! With the money I can buy a new cow to replace
the one I lost; my cattle are the most important thing for
my family to survive and to make sure that my younger
brother and sister stay in school” he says.
Even
though Mpolokeng and Sello’s dreams were deferred by the
untimely death of their parents, a renewed sense of hope is
being instilled in their lives, and those of thousands more
orphans and vulnerable children, through the cash grant and
the assistance that will go with them. “Cash transfers
have the greatest impact when combined with other social
services such as health, nutrition, education and
protection. The grants are part of a greater child-sensitive
social protection programme that will benefit entire
families” said Mr. Ahmed Magan, UNICEF Representative in
Lesotho.
The disbursement in Semonkong marked the
first complete payment covering all three pilot communities
– Matelile (Mafeteng district), Lebakeng (Qacha’s Nek
district) and Semonkong (Maseru district). The districts
were selected on the basis of their accessibility and the
availability of basic services in the areas. They represent
three distinctive geographic zones.
As expressed by
the Deputy Principal Secretary (DPS) of Health and Social
Welfare Ms. Moliehi Khabele, speaking on behalf of the
Minister of Health, one of the primary goals of the pilot
phase is to develop and test effective systems for
targeting, enrolment, payment to beneficiaries, monitoring,
procurement and financial management, training of
stakeholders, public awareness and community involvement.
Lessons learnt from the pilot districts will guide the
refinement of the Child Grants Programme in preparation for
a phased roll out across the country.
Around 950 households and over 2,370 orphans and vulnerable children are now benefiting from the Child Grants programme, which will continue to be expanded in the pilot districts and will gradually be introduced in other districts of the country by 2011.
ENDS