Nullamlacus dui ipsum

Nullamlacus dui ipsum conseque loborttis non euisque morbi penas dapibulum orna. Urnaultrices quis curabitur phasellentesque congue magnis vestibulum quismodo nulla et feugiat. Adipisciniapellentum leo ut consequam ris felit elit id nibh sociis malesuada.

Continue Reading »

Teachers Login Here

Teachers Login Form

 

Pupils Login Here

Pupils Login Form

 



SGBV SECTOR

Human Rights Human Africa strongly believes that sexual and gender-based violence(SGBV) can be prevented in all aspects of human life and in all form as such as physical, economical, emotional / psychological, sexual violence and denial of resources or access to services. SGBV inflicts harm or women, girl’s even men and boys and is a severe violation of several human rights. SGBV may be perpetrated by anyone, including individuals from host communities, from refugee and humanitarian actors. Persons in positions of authority (police, security officials, community leaders, teachers, employers, landlords, humanitarian workers) may abuse their power and commit SGBV against persons of concern.
HRHA is striving to change some social and gender roles or responsibilities that cause or worsen tensions within the homes and families, sometimes resulting in domestic violence. Changing some harmful customary or traditional behaviors that may amount to SGBV such as early marriage, female genital mutilation / cutting (FGM/C) honor killing maiming and forced abortion, during situations of armed conflict, sexual violence may be used as a weapon of war. Preventing and responding to SGBV is a core component and responsibility of HRHA. Given the multi sectorial nature of the response it requires, HRHA and partners shall mainstream SGBV prevention through the emergency response and in programing across all sectors. SGBV prevention and response interventions are life-serving. Programing must begin at the very outset of an emergency irrespective of the number of reported SGBV cases. HRHA works together with the governments, other agencies, local and international and persons of concern to prevent and respond to SGBV.
Protection: HRHA regularly do and shall do the following to curb down GBV risks.

• To protect rights of women, girls, men and boys against SGBV at all times and in all locations including in the homes, schools and work places, in public places, on public transport and at aid distribution points.
• To ensure that SGBV survivors can freely report incidents and have timely and non-discriminatory access to services and support including medical, psychosocial, legal and material assistance as well as safe spaces where needed
• To address the specific protection needs of persons at high risk of SGBV including (older persons, persons with disabilities, adolescent girls, children and female, heads of household and take them into account in all programing.
• To ensure that SGBV survivors can seek and get a judicial remedy if they wish
• To encourage and enable persons of concern to become actively involved in protecting women, men, girls and boys against SGBV through community-based protection networks and initiatives.



HUMAN RIGHTS HUMAN AFRICA UNDERLYING PRINCIPLES AND STANDARDS

SURVIVOR-CENTERED APPROACH
1. Treat every survivor humanly and with respect
2. The safety of the survivors and their families is very important
3. Respect the choices, wishes, rights and confidentiality of survivors and their families. The identity of survivor should never be revealed without his or her prior consent
4. Provide services and support without discrimination on any grounds.
• HUMAN RIGHTS BASED-APROACH
Empower individuals and communities to exercise their rights rather than assisting them as ‘beneficiaries’.
• AGE, GENDER AND DIVERSITY APPROACH
All women, men, girls and boys of all ages and diverse backgrounds should enjoy their rights on an equal footing and participate fully in decision making.
• COMMUNITY-BASED PROTECTION APPROACH
1. Put the capacity, rights and dignity of persons of concern at the centre of programing
2. Involve communities actively in all aspects of programs that affect them
3. The community is the driving force of change
4. Gender equality and women’s empowerment, gender norms and unequal power relations are the underlying cause of SGBV
5. Work with women, men, girls and boys to address the root causes of SGBV and support women and girls to be leaders in their communities on an equal footing with men and boys.
6. A life-serving intervention. SGBV preventing and response are life-serving interventions. Plan and implementing them from the start of an emergency without waiting for evidence of prevalence.
• A MULTI-SECTORAL APPROACH
HRHA shall involve other partners with different functions to make sure that SGBV prevention is mainstreaming throughout the response.

LIVELIHOOD SECTOR
HRHA believe that livelihood development ought to incorporate the ideas and insights of a wide range. The program would contain ways to acquire human social, financial and physical capital, to integrate youth livelihood development with programs in other sectors. Youth livelihood programs must engage and support youths, most of whom are already focused on the immediate needs of their households and who desire more sustainable and socially constructive livelihood pathways. HRHA is determined how to encourage these youth and help them acquire the relevant competencies and resources necessary to enhance their livelihoods, and ultimately the livelihoods of others within their communities. HRHA believes that youths can and should be the key actors in the strengthening, rebuilding and transformation the economy of their nations. When appropriately engaged and adequately prepared for roles in the worlds of work, family life and civil society youth can be definite assets for community development. However, when governments and communities’ disregards the huge number of youth with minimum attachment to the formal sector, youth can also become a profoundly de-stabilizing force, specifically the absence of livelihood development opportunities for youth can impede a nation’s development in the form of increased crime, violence, poor health, disease, extremism and both social and political instability. Thus, the presence of livelihood development (to complement workforce development) is a strategic necessity for national development, especially when delivered in careful coordination with traditional investment in health, education, democracy and leadership and economic growth activities. Livelihood development is the core driver of positive youth outcome in deferent areas such as health i.e. HIV / AIDS prevention, education, public safety and democracy and governance. These linkages however, must be designed with specific sector outcomes in mind along with carefully-planned and well executed, monitoring and evaluation systems.


EDUCATION SECTOR

No one choose to become a refugee, and we therefore treat the most vulnerable children who were forced to flee from their country of origin with dignity as much as we do to our children. Holistically, education is hope among refugee children as well as for children from host communities. Education brings a sense of normality to their lives after being affected by severe circumstances. It provides protection mechanisms to these children in challenging conditions and helps them to cope with the difficult situation as well as building the foundation to reach their full potential of their lives. Education is an essential enabler to break of the vulnerability created by conflict and displacement. We have a great belief in education that information you get will empower the child to be independent, to grow with the mind of independent, to be able to handle issues and to understand issues that surrounding his environment. HRHA holds the program of accelerated education program to support drop out both refugees and host communities HRHA is in position to empowering and encouraging youth in children to go back to school and skilling them to in different fields including tailoring, hairdressing salon, carpentry, construction, welding etc in order to uplift their standards of living. “Without human rights there is no human development.”