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A teacher rather than a pimp
A teacher rather than a pimp
From the 1 October 2006, AVEC will have 752 children to support. We have found two more schools where the personnel are committed to providing basic schooling for children from rural backgrounds. They are situated in the Homale municipality, about ten kilometres from Battambang.
We have planned to support all the pupils of these schools, from the beginning of the trimester. There is a total of 89 pupils in one scool and 503 in the other one. We will provide them all with what we call our “school survival kits”, with contain the most necessary material needed to study successfully, notably: 5 note books, 3 ballpoint pens, 2 erasers and some pencils, as well as a uniform with the AVEC logo.


 





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AVOIDING MASS MIGRATION TO THE CITIES PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Administrator   
Thursday, 30 June 2005

Side Story
Promote gender equality and empower women

Target by 2005: Eliminate gender disparity in primary and secondary education.

While most of the Millennium Development Goals face a deadline of 2015, the gender parity target was set to be achieved a full ten years earlier - an acknowledgement that equal access to education is the foundation for all other development goals. Yet recent statistics show that for every 100 boys out of school, there are still 117 girls in the same situation. Until equal numbers of girls and boys are in school, it will be impossible to build the knowledge necessary to eradicate poverty and hunger, combat disease and ensure environmental sustainability. And millions of children and women will continue to die needlessly, placing the rest of the development agenda at risk.

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Mom of 15 years living in the street with his child in Cambodia
living in the street in Battambang
We work under difficult conditions, in regions which are accessible only by small clay paths and cut off from all means of communication. These small “villages” are inhabited primarily by women and children. Most of the men have left for the city, and some of them have restarted their life elsewhere, with a new wife, normally younger than the former. The system left in place by the Khmer regime does not in anyway oblige a man to provide for the needs of a woman and children that he has left behind.
It is these tiny miserable villages that serve as the main ground for the child traffickers operations. Very often, it is women traffickers who approach poor parents, promising a beautiful future for their child.

 
 
 
 
childhood and drug
childhood and drug in Cambodia
A very straight-forward contact is necessary with the village chiefs, as well as with the school head masters and the teachers, in order to follow up on the children who are attending school because of our intervention. We try to work consciously with other NGOs that are specialised in rural development, to try to find sustainable solutions for families at risk (poultry breeding, farming, etc).

We are concentrating on the future of the children, working systematically to prevent sale and trafficking in children, as well as sexually transmissible diseases. This goes especially for women living alone, who are obliged to provide for their, often numerous, children. These women work secretly in prostitution, and do not protect themselves from theses diseases for fear that they will loose their clients if they do, or because they are badly informed on STDs
We are concentrating on the future of the children, working systematically to prevent sale and trafficking in children, as well as sexually transmissible diseases. This goes especially for women living alone, who are obliged to provide for their, often numerous, children. These women work secretly in prostitution, and do not protect themselves from theses diseases for fear that they will loose their clients if they do, or because they are badly informed on STDs
 
 
childhood and drug in Cambodia
childhood and drug
We are concentrating on the future of the children, working systematically to prevent sale and trafficking in children, as well as sexually transmissible diseases. This goes especially for women living alone, who are obliged to provide for their, often numerous, children. These women work secretly in prostitution, and do not protect themselves from theses diseases for fear that they will loose their clients if they do, or because they are badly informed on STDs.
 
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photos AVEC Copyright © 2005-2006
Text corrected and translated by: Charlotta Friedner
Last Updated ( Friday, 26 January 2007 )
 
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