CHILD GRANTS SUPPORT ORPHANED CHILDREN IN LESOTHO
Lesotho currently experiences high rates of HIV/AIDS, high unemployment and poverty, with children the most vulnerable. HIV/AIDS has devastated the productive adult population. The country has the third highest HIV prevalence in the world, estimated at 23.2% of people between 15 and 49. There are more than 180,000 orphaned children, of whom 55% lost one or both parents to AIDS-related diseases.
In 2009, the Government of Lesotho launched the Lesotho Child Grants Programme. This is a groundbreaking initiative to improve the wellbeing of children, including those orphaned or otherwise affected by HIV/AIDS and those who live in poor families where food insecurity and under-nutrition prevail. Child-headed households and poor households caring for orphans and other vulnerable children are provided with quarterly payments. 5,000 children in 1,250 households are reached initially.
Although cash transfers do not replace other forms of assistance, they are a welcome complement to investments in services. When poor households access services, they are better able to utilize the cash effectively for the child. One grandmother from Lesotho, Mampepuoa Nkane, 67, talked about the hardship of taking care of her five orphaned grandchildren and the impact of the Child Grants. “It’s hard to put food on the table every day” she said. “After my son passed away I was left to raise his children alone. Now I have more hope and I will not have to worry every day.”
Child grants are attracting growing interest for their role in improving human development, reducing hunger and tackling extreme poverty and vulnerability. They are increasingly recognized as an element of an overall care package for children affected by AIDS.
Human face of partnership
Below are select example from the Report of concrete country specific projects that resulted in improving the lives of individuals
- Albania: free from mines
- Victims of torture in Iraq
- Keeping hope alive in the world’s largest refugee camp
- Road rehabilitation in DRC
- Safer cities in Bangladesh
- Saharawi refugees
- Agricultural cooperatives in Chechnya and Ingushetia
- Water changes lives in Sudan
- Nutrition and medical support to vulnerable in Kenya
- Plumpy’nut help children recover from under-nutrition in Ethiopia
- Cyclone victims in Myanmar
- Regional cassava initiative in Central and Eastern Africa
- Midwives in Sudan
- Eradicating the Guinea worm in Ghana
- Public Private Partnerships bring water to rural people in Somalia
- Orphaned children in Lesotho
- Psychosocial support in Occupied Palestinian Territory
- Traditional practices help local development in Uzbekistan
- Supporting Parliament’s dialogue with citizens and media in Tanzania
- Bhutan embraces environmental mainstreaming
- Palestine refugee women gain valuable skills
- Meat market in Somalia
- Improved storage of crops in Mozambique
