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The UN and the Woman Farmer Foundation Celebrate International Youth Day with Young Farmers
On the 12th of August 2021, the UN Family and the Woman Farmer Foundation celebrated International Youth Day with young members of the Youth Tunnel Foundation.
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12 August 2021
The UN and the Woman Farmer Foundation Celebrate International Youth Day with Young Farmers
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16 July 2021
UN, AfCFTA, Government support women cross border traders
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Speech
23 June 2021
RC statement at the commemoration International Widows Day
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The Sustainable Development Goals in UN Eswatini
The Sustainable Development Goals are a global call to action to end poverty, protect the earth’s environment and climate, and ensure that people everywhere can enjoy peace and prosperity. These are the goals the UN is working on in Eswatini:
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15 April 2021
“There is No Tool for Development More Effective Than the Empowerment of Women”
In 2015, World Leaders adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The 17 SDGs call for action by all countries to promote prosperity while maintaining peace, protecting the planet, the people and building partnerships. With only ten years remaining to achieve these goals, countries are accelerating steps towards ending poverty, fighting inequalities, tackling climate change, and ensuring that no one is left behind. Every month, the United Nations places one of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) under the spotlight, highlighting its purpose, targets, and criticality in advancing Agenda 2030. This month’s focus is SDG 5: Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls.
Earlier this month, the UN Secretary General, Mr. Antonio Guterres, stated that the COVID-19 pandemic has “a woman’s face”. This is undeniable.
Indeed, women continue to play a disproportionate role in responding to the virus, eitheras frontline healthcare workers or as care-takers at home. In this regard, women’s unpaid care work has increased significantly as a result of school closures and the increased parental responsibilities women discharge, in addition to caring for the elderly. Women are also harder hit by the economic impacts of COVID-19, as they disproportionately work in insecure labour markets. Nearly 60 per cent of women work in the informal economy, which puts them at greater risk of falling into poverty.
In Africa, rural women in particular are bearing the brunt of the COVID-19 pandemic. In fact, it is estimated that the pandemic will likely push 47 million more women into poverty, reversing decades of progress.
The pandemic has also led to a steep increase in violence against women and girls. With lockdown measures in place, many women were trapped at home or in their communities with their abusers, struggling to access services affected by cuts and restrictions. Data is already showing that, since the outbreak of the pandemic, violence against women and girls – and particularly domestic violence – has very significantly intensified.During the pandemic, calls to helplines increased five-fold, reporting cases of intimate partner violence.
In Eswatini, even as we celebrated the International Women’s Day on 8 March, there have been shocking headlines of domestic and intimate partner violence where, sadly, the lives of women and girls have been lost.
The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic could reverse the limited progress that has been made on gender equality and women’s rights over the last few decades since the Beijing Declaration.
Clearly, the coronavirus outbreak is exacerbating existing inequalities for women and girls across every sphere, from health and the economy to security and social protection.
Over the last decades, we have witnessed positive progress on Gender Equality. As we speak, globally, there are more girls in school than in previous decades. There are fewer girls forced into early marriage; more and more women are serving in Parliament and in positions of leadership, and laws are being reformed to advance gender equality.
Despite these gains, many challenges remain: discriminatory laws and social norms remain pervasive; women continue to be underrepresented at all levels of political leadership; and 1 in 5 women and girls between the ages of 15 and 49 report experiencing physical or sexual violence by an intimate partner within a 12-month period.
After the lockdowns, one million girls are expected never to return to school due to early teenage pregnancy.
In Eswatini, 87 of every 1,000 girls are falling pregnant and losing their education, as are many losing their lives to pregnancy and birth complications. One girl losing her life to early teenage pregnancy is one too many.
The physical and psychological consequences of violence against women are devastating: not only does violence undermine the health, dignity, security and autonomy of its victims, but it happens in a culture of silence. Less than 10 percent of women report incidences of violence to the police. We cannot afford to remain silent a moment longer.
Gender-based violence knows no boundaries and can affect anyone, anywhere and at any time. However, particular groups of women and girls are extremely vulnerable to violence, including young girls and older women; women who identify as lesbian, bisexual, transgender or intersex; migrants and refugees; indigenous women and ethnic minorities; as well as women living with HIV or disabilities, and those living through humanitarian crises.
Girls and women account for 72 percent of trafficking victims, of whom most are trafficked for the purpose of sexual exploitation. More than 200 million girls and women alive today have experienced female genital mutilation (FGM) in 30 countries in Africa, the Middle East and Asia.
Despite the many obstacles girls and women face, they continue to show incredible strength and resilience as they fight on the frontlines in many ways: not only as mothers, caretakers and bread-winners at home; community leaders; peacekeepers in war zones and soldiers, but also as nurses, doctors, healthcare and essential workers during COVID-19.
Preliminary studies show that women account for over 70 percent of COVID-19 infections among healthcare workers, a testament to their share in the total healthcare workforce. Yet, they account for less than a third of all deaths among healthcare workers. These statistics are only a few that demonstrate the courage and resilience of women.
We have also witnessed the phenomenal leadership of female leaders such as Jacinda Ardern, the Prime Minister of New Zealand, and Angela Merkel, the Chancellor of Germany. Their responses to the COVID-19 pandemic have proved effective, inclusive and people-oriented; making significant strides to ensuring that nobody is left behind in their recoveries from COVID-19.
Only 23 countries today have an elected female Head of State or Government, while 119 countries have never had a female leader. Africa remains exceptionally behind in women leadership, as only four women have ever held positions as Head of State or Head of Government.
In Eswatini, during the COVID-19 pandemic, we have witnessed the exceptional leadership of brave women such as the Honourable Minister of Health and other female Cabinet Ministers, Honourable female members of the Parliament and the many others – wives, businesswomen, women farmers, teachers, big sisters to orphans, grandmothers and the alike – who have led their families and their communities throughout the pandemic. The vision, the innovative thinking, the humanity and the leadership of female Captains of Industry and sisters such as the ones involved in the Vukani BoMake project have helped to transform the lives of so many others across this beautiful nation. All of them have demonstrated incredible resilience in the face of the several adversities they have faced, and turned challenges into opportunities, and opportunities into success.
Despite those inspiring examples, the 2018 UN Human Development Report ranked Eswatini 137 out of 159 countries for gender inequality, for unemployment remains higher for young women than men, at 50 percent and 44 percent respectively.
Gender equality is not only a fundamental human right, but a necessary foundation for a peaceful, prosperous and sustainable world.
Worldwide, it is estimated that gender parity, at the current rate in which it is moving, will not be reached in national Parliaments before 2063, and in ministerial positions before 2077.
As we seek to recover from COVID-19, we are presented with a unique opportunity to recover better whilst recognising the powerful roles that women and girls have played throughout the pandemic.
The United Nations’ response to COVID-19 is therefore founded on the principles of protecting the people and the planet, preserving the gains of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and achieving Agenda 2030.
In line with SDG 5, the UN is continuing to invest in life-changing initiatives for millions of women and girls worldwide through the UN Trust Fund to End Violence against Women. This Fund focuses on preventing violence, implementing laws and policies, and improving access to vital services for survivors. With more than 460 programmes in 139 countries and territories over the past two decades, the United Nations will not stop until every girl and woman is given equal access to rights and opportunities.
The United Nations continues to stand in solidarity with the Government and the people of Eswatini as, altogether, we continue to pursue a just, prosperous and resilient Eswatini in which nobody is left behind.
We need local solutions to local problems and a recovery that places women and girls at the centre. In the powerful words of the late Kofi Annan: “There is no tool for development more effective than the empowerment of women.” It is in solidarity that we will achieve gender equality, a gain that will benefit the entirety of our nation and world.
SDG 5 Targets:
End all forms of discrimination against all women and girls everywhere
Eliminate all forms of violence against all women and girls in the public and private spheres, including trafficking and sexual and other types of exploitation
Eliminate all harmful practices, such as child, early and forced marriage and female genital mutilation
Recognize and value unpaid care and domestic work through the provision of public services, infrastructure and social protection policies and the promotion of shared responsibility within the household and the family as nationally appropriate
Ensure women’s full and effective participation and equal opportunities for leadership at all levels of decision making in political, economic and public life
Ensure universal access to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights as agreed in accordance with the Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development and the Beijing Platform for Action and the outcome documents of their review conferences
Undertake reforms to give women equal rights to economic resources, as well as access to ownership and control over land and other forms of property, financial services, inheritance and natural resources, in accordance with national laws
Enhance the use of enabling technology, in particular information and communications technology, to promote the empowerment of women
Adopt and strengthen sound policies and enforceable legislation for the promotion of gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls at all levels
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14 April 2021
UN Personnel Are Vaccinated Against COVID-19
The rollout of the vaccines took place at the UN isolation facility: a step taken by the United Nations to ensure the good health and well-being of their personnel who serve as frontline workers, and as reflected in Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 3.
The United Nations is at the forefront of the world’s efforts to respond to and recover from the pandemic, as well as ensure equitable distribution of COVID-19 vaccines within and amongst nations.
Eswatini’s nationwide rollout of the COVID-19 vaccines commenced on 19th March 2021 and will be carried out in two phases. Phase 1, stage A, will cover all health workers and stage B will cover the elderly and people with comorbidities. Phase 2 will cover other frontline workers such as the police force, teachers, transport industry and the media, whilst Phase 3 will reach all remaining adults.
The vaccination of UN staff and personnel will enable the continuity of business operations, as well as assist the Government’s efforts to recover better from the pandemic.
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17 March 2020
COVID-19: We Will Come Through This Together
The upheaval caused by the coronavirus – COVID-19 - is all around us. And I know many are anxious, worried and confused. That’s absolutely natural.
We are facing a health threat unlike any other in our lifetimes.
Meanwhile, the virus is spreading, the danger is growing, and our health systems, economies and day-to-day lives are being severely tested.
The most vulnerable are the most affected—particularly our elderly and those with pre-existing medical conditions, those without access to reliable health care, and those in poverty or living on the edge.
The social and economic fallout from the combination of the pandemic and slowing economies will affect most of us for some months.
But the spread of the virus will peak. Our economies will recover.
Until then, we must act together to slow the spread of the virus and look after each other.
This is a time for prudence, not panic. Science, not stigma. Facts, not fear.
Even though the situation has been classified as a pandemic, it is one we can control. We can slow down transmissions, prevent infections and save lives. But that will take unprecedented personal, national and international action.
COVID-19 is our common enemy. We must declare war on this virus. That means countries have a responsibility to gear up, step up and scale up.
How? By implementing effective containment strategies; by activating and enhancing emergency response systems; by dramatically increasing testing capacity and care for patients; by readying hospitals, ensuring they have the space, supplies and needed personnel; and by developing life-saving medical interventions.
All of us have a responsibility, too -- to follow medical advice and take simple, practical steps recommended by health authorities.
In addition to being a public health crisis, the virus is infecting the global economy.
Financial markets have been hard hit by the uncertainty. Global supply chains have been disrupted. Investment and consumer demand have plunged -- with a real and rising risk of a global recession.
United Nations economists estimate that the virus could cost the global economy at least $1 trillion this year – and perhaps far more.
No country can do it alone. More than ever, governments must cooperate to revitalize economies, expand public investment, boost trade, and ensure targeted support for the people and communities most affected by the disease or more vulnerable to the negative economic impacts – including women who often shoulder a disproportionate burden of care work.
A pandemic drives home the essential interconnectedness of our human family. Preventing the further spread of COVID-19 is a shared responsibility for us all.
The United Nations – including the World Health Organization -- is fully mobilized.
As part of our human family, we are working 24/7 with governments, providing international guidance, helping the world take on this threat.
We are in this together – and we will get through this, together.
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20 August 2021
The UN and the Woman Farmer Foundation Celebrate International Youth Day with Young Farmers
Celebrations began with an interview on the Kusile Breakfast Show, whereby members of the Youth Tunnel Project discussed this year's International Youth Day theme; “Transforming Food Systems: Youth Innovation for Human and Planetary Health”. This year’s theme highlights the importance of innovative solutions developed by young people to overcome obstacles within food systems: an idea that will feed into the global United Nations Food Systems Summit taking place in September. Food Systems dialogues are on-going across the globe, including in Eswatini, and will inform the Food Systems Summit. In Eswatini, nine dialogues, hosted by the Ministry of Agriculture, with different industry stakeholders in agriculture, are scheduled to take place this month.
International Youth Day celebrations continued at Rider’s Ranch, in Sidvokodvo, where the UN Resident Coordinator, Ms Nathalie Ndongo-Seh, introduced Sands; a local musical artist and United Nations youth champion for climate action and agriculture, as did Ms Ndongo-Seh receive a tour of the flourishing Youth Tunnel Project.
“Today, we recognize the immense dedication, bravery, skills, creativity, innovation and great potential demonstrated by our young people who continue to fight on a daily basis for a better future for all,” stated the UN Resident Coordinator.
Ms Ndongo-Seh emphasized the significance of agriculture, as the largest sector of Eswatini’s economy, as well as the essential role that young people play in growing the economy.
“In the Kingdom of Eswatini, young agri-preneurs are finding local and sustainable solutions to ensure the longevity of the nation’s food systems,” she continued.
Agriculture serves as the foundation of Eswatini’s economy, yet it continues to experience the impact of the climate crisis, underinvestment, and the effect of the HIV and AIDS and COVID-19 pandemics, contributing to growing food insecurity.
Compounded by this food insecurity, young people are being left behind in the nation’s recovery from COVID-19, as youth unemployment remains very high at 47 percent. The agriculture sector also proves unappealing to most youth and therefore, there is a need for investment to be made in young people with an interest in agriculture, particularly women, for they are the future of the agriculture sector and the nation.
Sonia Paiva, founder of the Woman Farmer Foundation, expressed that; “Girls excel more than boys in the project, and we are excited to see the young people taking charge of agriculture and shaping their future.”
The Youth Tunnel Project seeks to train and empower young people, including persons living with disabilities, to farm in a sustainable manner, combat climate-related challenges, earn an income and ultimately improve national food security. Under the technical leadership of the Woman Farmer Foundation, and with support from the United Nations and Standard Bank, the Youth Tunnel Project is an incredible step towards achieving Agenda 2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), including: No Poverty (SDG1); Zero Hunger (SDG2); Health and Well Being (SDG3); Quality Education (SDG4); Gender Equality (SDG5); Water and Sanitization (SDG6); Renewable and Clean Energy (SDG7); Decent Work and Economic Growth (SDG 8); Industry and Innovation (SDG 9); Reduced Inequalities (SDG10); Sustainable Cities and Communities (SDG11); Responsible Consumption and Production (SDG12); as well as Climate Action (SDG13).
Caleb Mamba, a member of the Youth Tunnel Project, stated; “Through this project, the youth are able to sustain themselves, improve their livelihoods, reduce unemployment, and also reduce the country's poverty levels.”
Brian Mabuza, a young farmer involved in the initiative, continued; “Eswatini complains about the quality of produce, which is one of the reasons why the nation exports from other countries.” The Project serves to address this issue in the local market, ensuring the production of consistent quality produce, which is essential in the nation’s efforts to achieve food security.
The United Nations, in partnership with Standard Bank, are supporting the Woman Farmer Foundation to expand the Youth Tunnel Project to decentralized levels, including the nation’s 59 Tinkhundla Centres.
“We are extremely grateful to our partners for believing in all of the young people, and we have high hopes that the project will become a role model for Africa,” stated Ms Paiva.
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16 July 2021
UN, AfCFTA, Government support women cross border traders
The United Nations in Eswatini, Deputy Prime Minister’s Office and the Ministry of Commerce facilitated a national consultative dialogue aimed at collecting views from women cross border traders in Kingdom.
The virtual dialogue, which attracted about 70 participants from the government, development partners, UN Agencies and businesswomen was aimed at kickstarting the consultations in Eswatini. Eswatini is among the 54 of the 55 countries in the African continent that have ratified the AfCFTA.
The AfCFTA will open markets in critical sectors in which women are engaged, such as agriculture, manufacturing (clothing and textiles), and services, including tourism and other business services. To ensure that the promise for women yields its fruits, the AfCFTA secretariat partnered with UNDP and UNWomen to provide technical support to incorporate views of women cross border traders to inform the development of the Protocol on Women and Trade. Beyond the national consultations, the collaboration between the secretariat and the UN will also facilitate capacity building, and advocacy to ensure that the AfCFTA works for Africa’s women and youth.
In her opening remarks, the United Nations Resident Coordinator to Eswatini, Ms. Nathalie Ndongo-Seh, said the process of collecting views from the traders is critical to ensure that the women define the Protocol on Women in Trade.
She noted that despite the potential of the cross-border trade, the COVID-19 pandemic has laid bare the systemic inequalities within societies, striking the economy and vulnerable populations the hardest. “We know, for example, that the introduction of lockdown measures to curtail the spread of the coronavirus, resulted in most informal sector activities being halted, particularly affecting women who own 65% of the businesses,” she said.
She also said the recent civil unrests, both in Eswatini and in the Republic of South Africa, which resulted in violent protests and looting, have had a negative impact on the informal sector, and have seriously jeopardised cross border trade. “Such developments justify our investment in a Protocol for Women under the AFCFTA, as this instrument seeks to enhance the ability of women and youth to harness the benefits of the AfCFTA while mitigating the adverse effects of cross border trade,” said Ms. Ndongo-Seh.
In his welcome remarks, Principal Secretary at the DPMO, Mr. Makhosini Mndawe, noted that the Government of the Kingdom of Eswatini is committed to the empowerment of women as demonstrated by the development of major frameworks to guide the implementation of women’s economic empowerment initiatives.
These include;
The National Gender Policy, 2010 which has a specific thematic area on Economic empowerment of women;
50 Million African Women Speak Digital Platform- which also provides an enabling environment for trade in the COMESA region
Adoption of the Financial Inclusion Strategy that facilitates easy access to financial assistance for trade
Establishment of Federation of Association of Women in Business in Eastern and Southern Africa (FEMCOM)
Adoption of the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise (MSME Policy), among others.
“All these initiatives are geared towards the empowerment of women and youth to harness the demographic dividend as our interventions are guided by Agenda 2030, Agenda 2063, COMESA Social Charter, and many more,” said Mr. Mndawe.
He also mentioning that the Government is honoured by the African Union to host the Regional Office of Strategic importance, i.e the Ae-trade Regional Office to facilitate the implementation of a continental e-commerce platform and associated services as an enabler for digital transformation and boosting intra-African trade under the African Continental Free Trade Area.
“May I encourage women to take advantage of such forums created for their economic advancement,” said Mndawe, adding: “I also encourage women to continue with the registration on the 5O Million African Women Speak Platform for continuous interaction with other women in business across borders, mentorship programmes, peer to peer learning as well as information sharing.”
The dialogue presented an opportunity for the women in cross border trade to share their experiences. FEMCOM chairperson who is also a Member of Parliament highlighted the lack of access to finance and the impact of COVID-19 as key challenges women traders are currently facing. She was complemented by the chairperson of the Cross Border Trade, Ms. Thobile Dube, who said traders face many non-trade barriers ranging from harassment and corruption at the borders, to lack of medical attention when they’re in other countries in the SADC Region, language barriers and a general lack of safety, which the Protocol aims to address.
“If we face these barriers in the SADC Region, how worse will the situation be when we now start trading Africa-wide?” she asked.
UNWomen representative Ms Kgothatso Semela underscored the need for the national consultations to promote deeper awareness of the experiences of women in cross border trade across themes addressing Access to information, Access to support for utilizing deals and market opportunities in the AfCFTA, Access to affordable financing and trade facilitation measures. This was also emphasized by Sitshengisiwe Ndlovu a representative from AeTrade Group who highlighted the importance of understanding the gender-trade nexus and ensuring that the Protocol addresses it.
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16 July 2021
UN joins over 200 widows to celebrate International Widows Day in Manzini
On the 23rd June 2021, the United Nations Resident Coordinator in the Kingdom of Eswatini, Ms. Nathalie Ndongo-Seh joined over 200 women at the Millennium Park in Manzini to commemorate the International Widows Day.
The celebration, organized by Umhluma Women & Youth Foundation with support from the UN family, was a culmination of regional dialogues which were used to document challenges faced by widows across the country.
The national celebration was attended by Manzini Regional Administrator, Prince Chief Gija, Member of Parliament and Chairperson of the Parliamentary Women Committee, Hon. Lorraine Nxumalo, Acting Director of the Gender Unit in the Deputy Prime Minister’s Office, Ms. Nomzamo Dlamini and Umhluma Foundation Patron, Ms. Stella Lukhele.
International Widows’ Day is an opportunity to raise awareness on the hardships that widows face when their husbands die. It seeks to highlight the problems of widows and encourage people to help widows who may be struggling with the challenges of life. I wish, from the onset, to thank the organisers of this commemoration, for their resilience and determination to bring us together and sensitize us on those specific challenges.
This year’s theme was “Invisible Women, Invisible Problems”. The Day was to raise awareness on the challenges faced by widows and to mobilize support to address them. Widows were given an opportunity to share their stories of the various challenges they face, including food security, violation of rights, loss of property and abuse by in-laws.
In her remarks, the UN Resident Coordinator noted that the devastating impacts of COVID-have seen a significant increase in the number of widows and widowers and exacerbated their vulnerabilities. “It is now clearer to all that policymakers need to take specific measures to address issues that affect widows, including health access, pension access, food insecurity, sustainability or grants, land issues and so on to ensure that widows do not fall prey to poverty, hunger and health issues,” she said.
She added that women who have become widows as a result of COVID-19 should be identified. “The significance of International Widows Day and the awareness that it brings will definitely increase in the post-COVID-19 era as there are many issues facing widows,” she stated. “Working widows, for example, either do not earn much or have been rendered jobless by the pandemic. They bear the bulk of the problems previously shared with their deceased husbands, as they become the main bread winner, are fully responsible of their children upbringing, are confronted to legal/administrative/ and at times community issues that were exclusively handled by their departed husbands.”
Ms. Ndongo-Seh noted that around the world, including in Eswatini, widows are deprived of their rights and privileges. “In Eswatini, I am advised, widows are sometimes bound to observe mourning rituals which compel them to remain in seclusion for a long period of time, avoiding social gatherings including workplaces,” she stated. “Some widows are forced to remarry to a brother-in-law and are discouraged or even banned from re-marrying outside the husband’s family.”
According to the World Economic Forum, there are an estimated 258,481,056 widows globally with 584,574,358 children. The number of widows grew by 9 percent since 2010, partly because of conflicts and disease. Statistics for the number of widows after COVID-19 are not yet available.
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15 June 2021
Agriculture consultative indaba kicks off on a high note
On the 15th June 2021, a three-day multistakeholder consultative Indaba on the state of agriculture in Eswatini kicked off on a high note with over 200 participants joining the meeting virtually and physically at the Hilton Gardens Hotel in Mbabane.
Organised by the Ministry of Agriculture, with support from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), the consultative meeting is part of the Agrinvest initiative which seeks to establish an Agriculture Development Fund, Sector-based Development Plans as well as facilitate the creation of Industry-based Associations for farmers, especially those at smallholder level.
Minister of Agriculture, Hon. Jabulani Mabuza, who officially opened the meeting, stated that the purpose of the Indaba was to carry out a wide review and seek a consensus on the Agrinvest tools and institutions that are proposed to transform the food and agriculture sector. The Minister expressed confidence that the initiatives under Agrinvest would result in transformative change, while acknowledging that the perils of food insecurity, poverty and unemployment still persist despite previous investments. “I am sure you are all witnesses to the fact that our country has adequate land and water resources to produce enough for local consumption and export to global markets,” he said. “All that is required is to improve the coordination of value chain players and build trust, to ensure that all of us; government, private sector, farmers and markets complement each other to supply and meet the food demand.”
The Agrinvest initiative leverages private investments in agri-food systems by assisting the Government to deploy measures that create an enabling environment, conducive regulatory conditions and network of institutions to enable the private sector, including smallholder farmers, to perform investments that are compliant with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), generate jobs, food and nutrition security, substitute imports and increase exports.
In her remarks, the UN Resident Coordinator, Ms. Nathalie Ndongo-Seh, noted that agriculture is among the three sectors expected to lend greater impetus to recovery from the devastating impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. The other sectorsare manufacturing and construction. The agricultural sector, as it contributes to several SDGs, has the potential of leaving no-one behind and lifting out of poverty and hunger women and girls, orphans and child headed households, rural poor populations, the youth, persons with disability, persons living with HIV and AIDS, migrants and other vulnerable groups at risk of being left further behind. “I hope your deliberations will come up with recommendations on how the Eswatini economy will recover better from the challenges brought by the pandemic while also addressing issues such as youth employability and youth entrepreneurship in the agricultural sector,” she said.
The UN Resident Coordinator also expressed appreciation for the involvement and the level of participation of smallholder farmers in the consultative forum, noting that they are better positioned to bring transformative change that will ensure that the country produces enough food for its citizens and takes advantage of export markets. “We need your voices to be heard, so that we can find lasting solutions to ending hunger, achieving food security and improved nutrition, and promoting sustainable agriculture,” she said.
FAO Sub Regional Coordinator for Southern Africa and Representative for Eswatini, Dr Patrice Talla, informed the meeting that FAO is supporting countries, including Eswatini, to develop their second generation of National Agricultural Investment Plans. The initiative prepares countries to meet their Malabo commitments to ensure that all programmes relating to agriculture are coordinated and aligned with the Malabo commitments. “A key characteristic of the second generation of investment plans is that they are not just simple documents, but a combination of documents, network of structured instruments and institutions that are fit for purpose,” he said.
The Malabo Declaration on Accelerated Agricultural Growth and Transformation for Shared Prosperity and Improved Livelihoods is a set of new goals showing a more targeted approach to achieve the agricultural vision for the continent which is shared prosperity and improved livelihoods. It was signed by Heads of State and Governments at African Union Summit in Malabo, Equatorial Guinea in June 2014. One of the commitments of the Declaration is the allocation of at least 10% of public expenditure to agriculture.
The consultative meeting also feeds into the UN global Food Systems Summit to be convened by the UN Secretary General, Mr. Antonio Guterres in September. The Summit aims to maximise the co-benefits of a food systems approach across Agenda 2030, that mees the challenges of climate change. The Summit aims to provide a platform for new ambitious actions, innovative solutions, and plans to transform food systems and leverage these shifts to deliver progress across all the SDGs. Principal Secretary in the Ministry of Agriculture, Mr Bongani Masuku, is the convener of on-going national level dialogues being carried out with the support of the United Nations through FAO, IFAD, WFP and WHO.
The consultative meeting will end on Thursday, 17 June 2021, following deliberations that are organized in selected value chains, including baby vegetables, cotton, fruit trees, livestock and others.
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04 June 2021
Minister of Agriculture, UN Resident Coordinator visit successful agroforestry farmer in Manzini
On the 3rd of June 2021, Minister of Agriculture, Hon. Jabulani Manzini and the UN Resident Coordinator, Ms. Nathalie Ndongo-Seh visited a smallholder farmer who has demonstrated success in agroforestry in Lwandle area, a rural community on the outskirts of Manzini.
The visit sought to witness the success of the Swaziland Agricultural Development Programme (SADP), an initiative supported by the European Union and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in 2009 aimed at improving food security of rural households and to foster equitable economic growth and development. Senior officials from the Ministry of Agriculture, and FAO were part of the visit.
Mr. Zuka Bhembe has planted over 2000 pawpaw tress, 800 banana plants, a sizeable number of mango and orange plants…and has recently started beekeeping. In 2010, and due to the drought conditions prevailing at that time, he was enlisted by Ministry of Agriculture and FAO to try out Agroforestry as an alternative to farming. He received 20 fruit tree seedlings, 5 banana plants, 5 mango plants, 5 pawpaw plants and 5 orange plants as well as training.
Mr. Bhembe expressed thanked the Ministry of Agriculture and the UN Family for assisting him with the project and for showing up to see his progress. “Because I am always at the fields in my farm with my wife and children, working very hard with no time to rest, the community has always thought we are anti-social and do not want to socialize with them and do not want to work for the community,” he said.
The Minister thanked Bhembe and his family for their resilience and determination to see their farming succeed. “If many Emaswati did what Mr Bhembe and his family are doing, Eswatini would have progressed much further as a country,” he said. He related his personal story of how agriculture shaped him into the man he is today. He said he was raised by farmers, and the money earned paid his school fees.
He urged in particular young people to take agriculture a career choice. “Agriculture is one of the most important sectors of the economy that does not become overcrowded, and there are always job opportunities in it,” he said. “The issue of youth unemployment will not be resolved until they change their perception of agriculture, which provides plenty of job opportunities. People should have a positive outlook on farming. What we eat and wear is agriculture. Stop claiming that there is no money in agriculture.”
The UN Resident Coordinator noted that Bhembe’s project demonstrates the potential of agroforestry and tree-based systems in contributing to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). “It is incredible how Mr. Bhembe and his wife have transformed this farm into the viable enterprise that it is today,” she said. “Sustainably managed agriculture, trees and forests, including their production systems, are key sectors for greening economies and efficiently transitioning to a service-based economy. This example shows how smallholders fit into that system.”
The Resident Coordinator said based on the success achieved by this farmer, the country was on course to stop importing from other countries what they can produce themselves.
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Press Release
03 March 2021
Next-Generation Regional Collaborative Platform Meeting Kicks Off for First Time with Regional UN Entities in Africa
BRAZZAVILLE – Africa’s regional know-how, assets and policy expertise will be more systematically channeled to the Resident Coordinators and United Nations Country Teams (UNCTs) across the continent as they help countries ensure an inclusive and sustainable transition out of the COVID-19 crisis, UN Deputy Secretary-General and Chair of the UN Sustainable Development Group Amina J. Mohammed stressed as she joined the first annual meeting of the new Regional Collaborative Platform on 2 March 2021.
“Today marks the start of the next-generation collaboration approach for the regional UN entities to support African countries to respond and recover better from the COVID-19 pandemic and reignite the Decade of Action for the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, which is aligned with the Africa Union Agenda 2063,” Ms. Mohammed said.
The United Nations has been making progress on its sweeping reforms to strengthen its support to countries, leveraging its capacities at all levels. The new Regional Collaborative Platform has responded to the growing need for enhanced UN coordination and regional collaboration in the face of the pandemic and implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals. It brings together UN regional expertise, capacity and data to provide analytical, policy and operational support to countries.
Yesterday’s discussion, attended by regional representatives from the Africa UN development system, focused on high-priority issues for the African continent to recover better from the pandemic and move toward the Sustainable Development Goals. These included accelerating the implementation of the continental free trade agreement; investing in youth and women’s empowerment to help countries reap the benefit of their demographic dividends; advancing home-grown sustainable and scalable technologies and digital solutions; building climate and disaster resilience; and continuing to support the African Union’s “Silencing the Guns” initiative.
Across the continent, Resident Coordinators and UNCTs are supporting countries in their access to COVAX vaccines and their socioeconomic response plans. In addition to the pandemic recovery, UN entities will work together to support sustainable development efforts in the Sahel, the Lake Chad Basin and the Horn of Africa, and address the resurgence of Ebola, and climate crises with severe damage caused by deadly droughts, cyclones and locust outbreaks.
“We are still in a recovery phase for the continent. We need additional resources. Our low- and middle-income countries, as well as small island states, have lost a lot of their resources. They need more fiscal space. They need more revenues. They need additional liquidity to ensure we build forward better,” said Under-Secretary-General Vera Songwe, Executive Secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA).
Although it was a transitional year, the regional UN entities demonstrated evidence of enhanced system-wide collaboration at the regional level. For example, last year, all of them joined forces to launch the Knowledge Management Hub on COVID-19 and shared a business continuity plan with governments to support their e-governance, e-justice and e-commerce for livelihoods, while the Africa e-education strategy was introduced to Resident Coordinators to provide emergency education to more than 100 million African children out of school.
“The African region is at a strategic juncture with COVID-19 recovery programmes and investments that we are making to enhance trade. All our efforts will yield desired results only if Africa’s people – our most important resource – feel productive, if they feel valued, if they feel safe, and if they feel secure,” said Assistant Secretary-General Ahunna Eziakonwa, Director of the Regional Bureau for Africa at the UN Development Programme (UNDP).
The new platform will engage with the African Union in April and accelerate its effort to deliver on its promise with an impact-oriented focus on implementations.
The Regional Collaborative Platform is chaired by the UN Deputy Secretary-General with two Vice-Chairs: Ms. Songwe and Ms. Eziakonwa. Its joint secretariat is comprised of UNECA, UNDP and the UN Development Coordination Office (DCO).
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Notes for correspondents
Agenda 2063 is Africa’s blueprint and master plan for transforming Africa into the global powerhouse of the future. It is the continent’s strategic framework that aims to deliver on its goal for inclusive and sustainable development.
The UN Resident Coordinator system encompasses all organizations of the United Nations system dealing with operational activities for development, regardless of their formal presence in the country.
Screenshots of the meeting can be downloaded here (©UNDCO).
Media contacts
Hiroyuki Saito, Regional Communications Officer
Regional Office for Africa, UN Development Coordination Office
saitoh@un.org
Maleele Choongo
Regional Bureau for Africa, UN Development Programme
Maleele.choongo@undp.org
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Press Release
14 December 2020
Statement of Condolences by the UN Resident Coordinator, Ms. Nathalie Ndongo-Seh, Following the Passing of His Excellency the Rt. Hon. Prime Minister, Ambrose Mandvulo Dlamini
It was with great sadness that the United Nations Family in the Kingdom of Eswatini has learned of the untimely passing of His Excellency The Right Honourable Prime Minister, Mr. Ambrose Mandvulo Dlamini.
His Excellency was a passionate, kind, inspirational and exceptional leader; a man of the people and a fierce fighter for a great and a greater Kingdom of Eswatini where no one is left behind. His Excellency was a very close partner, a crucial ally, a champion and a valued supporter of the work of the United Nations Development System in Eswatini, for which we will always be grateful. He will be remembered for his jovial personality, his many impressive achievements in his short lifetime and his great sacrifice.
On behalf of the United Nations family in the Kingdom of Eswatini, I would like to extend heartfelt condolences to the Dlamini family, Their Majesties, the Government and the people of Eswatini in this difficult time. We are all devastated by the passing of an exceptional son and a great leader of this beautiful nation and pray for God’s comfort and strength to carry on with his vision of a better Eswatini post-COVID-19.
The UN Family has sent diplomatic notes to the Government of Eswatini through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation.
May his soul rest in peace.
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Press Release
16 October 2020
WFP News Release World Food Day 2020
Mbabane - The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) today joins its sister agencies in calling for global action to improve the systems that produce and distribute the food we eat, so that they can better withstand shocks including the COVID-19 pandemic that can spark alarming surges in the level of hunger in the world.
In many countries, the socio-economic effects of the pandemic – particularly loss of earnings and remittances – are heightening existing threats linked to conflict and climate change. The number of acutely hungry people in the world could increase by more than 100 million this year, according to WFP estimates. For particularly fragile countries, a slide towards famine is a real risk.
“‘The world produces enough food for everyone so it’s a problem not of scarcity but of access to nutritious and affordable food,” said WFP Executive Director David Beasley, “Smallholder farmers in developing nations need support so they can grow crops in a more sustainable way, then store and transport their produce to markets, and ultimately improve their own livelihoods. When food moves from the farm, along the supply chain and onto people’s plates in a fair and efficient way, then everyone benefits.”
WFP, which last week won the Nobel Peace Prize for its efforts to fight hunger, has unparalleled experience in buying and distributing food. Every year, WFP increases the amount of food it procures locally from smallholder farmers, providing training in post-harvest storage and in how to access markets. The aim is to build dynamic food systems which contribute to community-based agricultural growth and the strengthening of national economies.
The need for concerted action to improve agricultural production while enhancing global supply chains and ending food waste is reflected in this year’s World Food Day theme: “Grow, Nourish, Sustain. Together”. The three Rome-based agencies - WFP, the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the UN (FAO) and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) – are calling for sustainable investment in food systems to achieve healthy diets for all. Without massive improvements in the food supply chain, many fragile nations are set to become increasingly vulnerable to financial volatility and climate shocks.
No one government or organisation can achieve these goals alone. More than ever, there is a need for global solidarity to help all people, and especially the most vulnerable, to confront the crises facing the planet – multiple conflicts, climate change and COVID-19.
The World Food Programme in Eswatini has created an innovative approach to increase incomes of small holder farmers, boost local economies and dramatically improve the nutrition for households and school going children. A staggering 45 percent of Emaswati children are orphans and vulnerable children , largely due to the impact of HIV and AIDS. Through the Home-Grown School Feeding Programme local smallholder farmers are delivering diverse, nutritious and above all, locally produced food to primary and secondary schools. Also, WFP is reaching 55,000 children, under eight years of age, in 1700 Neighbourhood Care Points (NCPs) across the country, with a hot and healthy meal five days a week.
“There is a need to move to a more sustainable food system that will adopt Climate Smart Agricultural which take into consideration the production of crops and animals with an advantage against climatic shocks and challenges thereof.” said Cissy Byenkya, Eswatini WFP Head of Office. “Also, we need to reduce post-harvest food losses, as this exerts too much pressure on the environment and increases the overall cost of production for smallholder farmers.”
WFP’s #StopTheWaste 2020 campaign highlights simple steps which everyone can take to prevent the huge amounts of food which are wasted each day. This forms some of the key priorities for WFP moving towards achieving Zero Hunger. WFP, FAO and the Ministry of Agriculture are strengthening capacities of smallholder farmers on climate smart agriculture practices, crop diversity, post-harvest storage, aflatoxins, market access and public procurement processes.
Another vital element in improving food systems is stopping food waste. WFP’s #StopTheWaste 2020 campaign highlights simple steps which everyone can take to prevent the huge amounts of food which are wasted each day.
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The United Nations World Food Programme is the 2020 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate. We are the world’s largest humanitarian organization, saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.
Follow us on Twitter @wfp_media @mobileVAM @WFPVAM @WFP_media or @WFP_Africa
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Press Release
18 October 2020
UN DEVELOPMENT SYSTEM IN ESWATINI CELEBRATES WFP NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
Mbabane (15 October 2020) – The United Nations Development System in the Kingdom of Eswatini joins the world in congratulating the World Food Programme (WFP) for the 2020 Nobel Peace Prize it was awarded on 9 October 2020 by the Norwegian Nobel Peace Committee in recognition of WFP’s efforts to combat hunger, fight the use of hunger as a weapon of war, and alleviate sufferings across the world.
“It is with pride and pleasure that we congratulate WFP for this prestigious award, which is a recognition of WFP’s and our collective humanitarian efforts to end hunger, restore hope and dignity among the needy, and serve mankind with pride and humility at a time when the world is facing so many crises from fragile economies, health pandemics, climate change, growing inequalities and conflict, to name only a few,” says the UN Resident Coordinator in Eswatini, Ms. Nathalie Ndongo-Seh. “We believe that, in line with similar recognitions of the UN Organization by the Nobel Peace Committee over the past years, this prestigious award will give the UN Development System in Eswatini impetus to increase our efforts and support to Emaswati people, in particular as we prepare our programmes for the next cycle of the United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework 2021-2025.”
In Eswatini, WFP provides technical assistance, services and coordination support for national food and nutrition security policies and programmes through approaches that enable progress on gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls, and HIV-sensitive actions. WFP’s General Food Assistance programme is now targeting communities with a high prevalence of food insecurity and malnutrition as a result of poor food production, drought and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
WFP Eswatini provides social safety nets for 55,000 orphans and vulnerable children under 5 years at 1,700 Neighbourhood Care Points (NCPs) in Eswatini through access to food and basic social services. Additionally, WFP works with the Government in implementing a sustainable, nutrition-sensitive, shock-responsive national school meals programme. The pilot for a Home-Grown School Feeding (HGSF) project started in September 2019, targeting 50 schools and 24,392 students. WFP Eswatini also collaborates with the Ministry of Health (MoH), the Ministry of Tinkhundla and Administration (MTAD), the Swaziland Network of Young Positives (SYNP+) and UN agencies to conduct integrated treatment literacy activities to empower communities through better nutrition, uptake of and adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) and tuberculosis (TB) medication, and sexual and reproductive health services.
In response to the impact of COVID-19 and erratic drought conditions, WFP is implementing a crisis response through unconditional resource transfers (URT). The URT aims to provide humanitarian assistance to the COVID-19 and drought-affected populations for 11 months starting in June 2020 until March 2021 through food and cash transfers. “We are deeply humbled that the World Food Programme has been honoured with the Nobel Peace Prize, this honour is made possible due to support from our Partners ” says WFP Head of Office Cissy BYENKYA. “Many of the people we help are fleeing conflict. Hunger is both a cause and an effect of conflict. Without peace and stability, we will struggle to achieve our goal of Zero Hunger. It puts the struggle of the 690 million people who go to bed hungry at the centre of world attention and we welcome this.”
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Press Release
21 September 2020
UN75: The Future We Want, The UN We Need
In January 2020, the United Nations launched the global consultation to mark its 75th anniversary. Through surveys and dialogues, it asked people about their hopes and fears for the future – representing the UN’s most ambitious effort to date to understand expectations of international cooperation and of the UN in particular. It is also the largest survey to date on priorities for recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic.
As of 21 September 2020, over a million people from all countries and all walks of life had taken part. Their answers provide unique insights into what the public wants at this challenging time for the world. They are released today to coincide with the UN General Assembly’s official commemoration of the 75th anniversary, held under the banner: the future we want, the UN we need. Key findings include:
Priorities for action
• Across regions, ages and social groups, respondents were broadly united in their priorities for the future.
• Amid the current COVID-19 crisis, the immediate priority for most respondents is improved access to basic services – healthcare, safe water, sanitation and education, followed by greater international solidarity and increased support to those hardest hit. This includes tackling inequalities and rebuilding a more inclusive economy.
• Looking to the future, the overwhelming concerns are the climate crisis and the destruction of our natural environment. Other priorities include: ensuring greater respect for human rights, settling conflicts, tackling poverty and reducing corruption. Perceptions of the UN
• Over 87% of respondents believe global cooperation is vital to deal with today’s challenges, and that the pandemic has made international cooperation more urgent.
• Seventy-five years after its founding, six in 10 respondents believe the UN has made the world a better place. Looking to the future, 74% see the UN as “essential” in tackling the challenges.
• However, respondents want the UN to change and innovate: to be more inclusive of the diversity of actors in the 21st century, and to become more transparent, accountable and effective.
“Across this anniversary year, we have engaged in a global conversation. And the results are striking. People are thinking big – they are also expressing an intense yearning for international cooperation and global solidarity. Now is the time to respond to these aspirations and realize these aims. In this 75th anniversary year, we face our own 1945 moment. We must meet that moment. We must show unity like never before to overcome today’s emergency, get the world moving and working and prospering again, and uphold the vision of the Charter.” - United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres
Full report and press kit: https://www.un.org/un75/presskit
Join the conversation: www.un75.online
Background
• In January 2020, the UN Secretary-General launched the UN75 initiative, not as a celebration, but as the world's largest conversation about current global challenges, and the gap between the future we want and where we are headed if current trends continue.
• The Secretary-General saw UN75 as an opportunity for the UN to listen to the people it serves and identify their priorities and suggestions for enhanced global cooperation. UN75 was initiated to better understand people’s hopes and fears for the future, inviting people everywhere to imagine the future they want and contribute ideas on how to make it a reality, building a better and more sustainable world, for all.
• Through formal and informal surveys, and dialogues held across the world, the exercise was intended to take stock of global concerns and gain views from across the world on what sort of global cooperation is required. It was also intended to re-imagine what role the United Nations might play in helping to address our global challenges.
• After the pandemic made in-person gatherings challenging in many parts of the world, the initiative increased its efforts to reach people online, expanding the one-minute survey and social media outreach to shift the dialogues to online settings, where possible. At the same time, it put more emphasis - and resources - on reaching those without internet access: working with UN offices and other partners on the ground, and through telephone and SMS communications.
• By adding questions on building back better from the pandemic, it was able to conduct the largest and most diverse global survey to date on post-COVID priorities.
• To date, over 1 million people have taken the one-minute survey in all UN Member and Observer States and more than 1,000 dialogues have been held in 82 countries across the world. In addition, 50,000 in 50 countries took part in independent polling by Edelman and the Pew Research Center, and artificial intelligence analysis of social and traditional media was conducted in 70 countries, along with academic and policy research mappings in all regions.
• Together, they represent the UN's most ambitious attempt to undertake a global reality check and hear from “we the peoples” on their priorities and suggested solutions to global challenges, providing unique insights into the future we want and the UN we need.
For further information and/or to request an interview, please contact Lisa Laskaridis (lisa.laskaridis@un.org)
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