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Youth in rural South Africa have taken a leadership role in promoting safer sex.


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UNICEF Funding Falls Short Leaving Millions of Children at Risk
By Bari Bates
BRUSSELS - If the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) had 1.28 billion dollars it could help 97 million people around the world.
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ZAMBIA
Chinese Underage Sex Scandal Sparks Emotive Debate
By Lewis Mwanangombe
LUSAKA - Zhang Daliu, 46, a carpenter from China never imagined himself in the dreadful confines of a stinking and overcrowded Zambian jail where conditions are so terrible that they lead to gastronomic disorders and skin diseases within days of confinement.
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PAKISTAN-INDIA
Women Expose Secret Genital Cutting Rite
By Zofeen Ebrahim
KARACHI - "It was a dark and dingy room, where an elderly woman asked me to take off my panties, made me sit on a low wooden stool with my legs parted and then did something…I screamed out in pain," recalls Alefia Mustansir, 40, of her childhood experience.
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HEALTH-SOUTH AFRICA
HIV-Related Deaths Slow Economy
By Kristin Palitza
CAPE TOWN - If there was no HIV/AIDS, South Africa would have 4.4 million more people than today, the size of a major city. This significant slow-down in population growth is causing a slow down in economic growth and resulting in social ills, researchers warn.
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INDIA
Advancing Economy Reveals a Hungry Underbelly
By K.S. Harikrishnan
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, India - Even a year after Rani, a three-year-old tribal girl in the backward Wayanad district of southern Kerala state, was treated in a government hospital for gastroenteritis she remains grossly underweight and suffers from frequent bouts of diarrhoea.
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AFGHANISTAN
Catch 'em Young, for Prostitution
By Rebecca Murray
MAZAR-E-SHARIF - Soma was a teenager in the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif when her grandfather arranged her marriage to a husband she had never met.
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SOMALIA
Rebuilding Among the Rubble
By Abdurrahman Warsameh
MOGADISHU - With vehicles and donkey carts packed with their belongings, Somalis are returning, four years after they fled, to their partially standing, bullet-scarred and mortar-shelled neighbourhoods in former Al-Shabaab controlled areas of Mogadishu.
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SOMALIA
Taking Schools Back From Militants
By Shafi’i Mohyaddin Abokar
MOGADISHU - Schools are beginning to re-open slowly in areas of capital Mogadishu that were until recently controlled by the militant Islamic group al-Shabaab. But an estimated 80 percent of students have not yet returned.
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HEALTH-SOUTH AFRICA
Male Circumcision a Route to Gender Equality
By Lee Middleton
CAPE TOWN - Although at first glance male circumcision may not be the most obvious entrée to get people talking about gender equality, activists in the Western Cape in South Africa are attempting to do just that.
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Drastic Child Poverty Might Destroy Lesotho’s Future
By Kristin Palitza
MASERU - Flagging economic fortunes and a persistent AIDS pandemic have devastated Lesotho, leaving little hope it will ever be able to pull itself out of its bleak poverty trap. Three out of five of the tiny southern African kingdom’s children are living in dismal poverty. Every fourth child is orphaned.
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MALAWI
No Social Safety Nets for the Poor
By Travis Lupick and Archibald Kasakura
BLANTYRE - In Mbedza village, a remote rural community in southern Malawi, Fedson Feston beams an infant’s awkward smile and swings his tiny arms up towards the face of his mother. Four months old, Fedson is too young to know how lucky he is to be alive.
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DR CONGO
Rehabilitating Former Child Soldiers Who "Liked" Killing
By Kristin Palitza
BUKAVU, DR Congo - Murhula’s* life changed forever when he was nine years old. It was the year that he learned to kill, torture and rape.
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ZIMBABWE
Forcing Parents to Top Up Teachers' Salaries Cannot Continue
By Ignatius Banda
BULAWAYO - As concerns deepen about the quality of education in Zimbabwe, parents can expect an indefinite extension of subsidising teacher salaries as the cash- strapped government struggles to meet the bloated civil service wage bill.
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Farming the future: sustaining smallholder farmers in RSSSub-Saharan Africa continues to register high levels of HIV prevalence. By focusing on the most vulnerable and marginalized ­ children ­ who remain largely invisible in the epidemic, “Children on the Frontline” seeks to ensure that it can help shape policies and inform Africa’s leadership on the specific needs and issues facing children effected and affected by HIV/AIDS. IPS Africa reporters in East and Southern Africa will seek to humanize the impact of the pandemic, demonstrate the challenges and highlight the types of solutions that can contribute to improving children’s lives by focusing on:
• Prevention of mother to child transmission
• Providing paediatric treatment and care
• Preventing infection among adolescents and young people
• Protection and care for children affected by AIDS

Slideshow - Hospitals in Kenya are participating......
South Africa wants to review its National Strategic Plan on HIV and AIDS next year and NGOs are hoping for more focus around the education, also of children affected by the disease.
Kenya says the guarantee of children’s rights in its new constitution shows the country’s commitment to protecting vulnerable citizens. Chris Stein reports from Windhoek.
Among the small number of countries in Africa that offer social protection grants for children, a British researcher says South Africa might have the most effective system, as Chris Stein reports from Windhoek.
Nasseem Ackburally discovers that Mauritian youth find safe sex boring.
Lameck Masina reports that HIV/Aids orphans in Malawi struggle to make ends meet.
Samantha Smit spends a day with an HIV positive teenager, Sesi, who says she hates taking ARVs.
PMTC is yet to gain a foothold in Uganda. Wambi Michael reports.
In Women's Words --  Zooming In on Children Infected and Affected by HIV/AIDS

Ethical guidelines for Journalists
UNICEF - Children and HIV and AIDS

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